That Synology one does look sweet, but what was your old NAS?
It was a Linksys NAS 200.
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That Synology one does look sweet, but what was your old NAS?
It was a Linksys NAS 200.
Thanks. I'm currently using an Intel SS4200-E NAS. It works well enough for backup, but it's too slow to be a media server. Also, I'm using standard Seagate HDs with RAID 5, I think. I just read this review on Amazon that is scaring me into thinking I ought to replace the HDs with these WD "Red" drives. If I'm going to do that then, hey, why not also replace the NAS! Not sure if the performance would be any better though...
Hmm. That is a little scary.
Should I partition it so that Time Machine only eats up part of it? Maybe 1TB to Time Machine, and 2TB for general storage? I'd fill 500G of that immediately, moving off the old NAS, and probably another good 200G moving off the new conversion files.
I do not recommend partitioning the Time Machine drive. Time Machine will kick it automatically every hour and if it is partitioned you are increasing the overhead on the system by asking the drive to split duties and seek across two partitions. Also, if you are doing a Time Machine image of all volumes, it would included the general storage volume, and then you are backing up a mechanism to itself.
One of the great things about Time Machine is that it will use the space to automatically create images every hour, and then you can push back through those. In my studio I can roll back to a complete image of the machine from months ago with no problem. This can be very handy for tracking down an old take of a project, or for restoring the machine to a state that predates a problem.
Meara, I don't know if you got an answer but I use time machine. Or I guess I use the time capsule. Anyway, it's sort of hidden away with my modem so it might not be obvious to anyone who would break in. At home, it's not hidden that we'll, but at work, it in a closed cabinet that might not be so obvious to someone for that reason.
Hmm. Well, I wasn't thinking of having it back up itself. I thought the backup of the general storage portion would go to the new raid array. But I take your other point.
I'm a huge ditherer, too. I had myself all the way to the shopping cart with my decision last night, and got Dave talked into it, when I concluded I coulsn't conclude yet.
I guess I'm trying to figure out how to make the Mac & pc backups live happily together, without one bullying th other out of space. And I think I'm unclear on truly how much space I'll require, because up to this point, everything lived on the daw and optical.
I'm using 3TB WD Red drives in the new NAS. So far they have run cool and quiet making the NAS silent. Needless to say, I can't say how they hold up over time.
That will probably be what I end up going with, Gud.
Hey, you guys look different from a mac!
I basically hate the "Arrange By" option in Finder. It is kind of like sorting by date and grouping by conversations in Outlook, except more confusing. What I really want to do is to be able to *sort*, not arrange. In List View we're cool--I got my column headers and my chevrons, and I'm good to go. But I have a lot of folders where the filenames are pretty much meaningless. I'd rather use icon or three column view, but still have it sorted.
I get that Command J brings up a View Options panel, and this is very helpful indeed. Lifesaver, to apply adequate hyperbole. But I don't understand how to get the same effect when I'm in the file open dialog--I find this is already irritatingly neutered (compared to the Windows default--I'd love to be able to type or paste a path, for instance). I can't right mouse click, and the dialog doesn't even have all the buttons above the file/folder display that Finder does.
Am I out of luck? Condemned to always click on "show all" three times every time?
Unrelatedly, does anyone use Applescript for anything? Ad hoc or routine? Did you write it yourself, or get it from someone else?
Do you use Folder Actions? I'm realising that I could definitely use one or two, but unfortunately not any of the defaults they have (mostly copying a file from folder A to folder B, whenever some other process on another machine creates it).
Unrelatedly, does anyone use Applescript for anything? Ad hoc or routine? Did you write it yourself, or get it from someone else?
I use one for combining PDFs, which is a routine thing. I think I "wrote" it myself (it's fairly simple; it's just add one [or more] PDF to the other, in descending order of date created), but I've been using it for so long that I genuinely can't remember.