Mal: We're still flying. Simon: That's not much. Mal: It's enough.

'Serenity'


Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


DCJensen - Nov 15, 2017 10:01:36 pm PST #25125 of 25496
All is well that ends in pizza.

DX, on the second machine, what OS is it? I've had some luck with the startup repair option on Windows 10.


DXMachina - Nov 16, 2017 5:04:43 am PST #25126 of 25496
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

Daniel, it's Win 7. Already tried the repair option, which apparently made things worse, i.e., now the install disk doesn't recognize either of the SSDs in the machine as viable boot drives. <Shrug> I'll get it figured out eventually. I'm just a little out of practice.


Gudanov - Nov 27, 2017 7:12:01 am PST #25127 of 25496
Coding and Sleeping

If anyone is curious it took about 90 minutes for me to upgrade to High Sierra. Glad I didn't try it during the work day :)


askye - Dec 02, 2017 9:25:28 am PST #25128 of 25496
Thrive to spite them

Mom has an LG phone and she it's filled with pictures and she can't update it. I have backed up and deleted some of them but there are a lot where I can't.

The thumbnail won't load and I get Error 0x8000405 Unspecified Error. I can't figure out how to fix this.

Any suggestions? I know a short term solution is to get her a micro SD card and move the pictures there but she does want to save them and be able to access them from more than just her phone


Gudanov - Dec 03, 2017 2:05:14 am PST #25129 of 25496
Coding and Sleeping

Probably not useful for anyone, but if you are installing Ubuntu I have a repo with scripts for installing Atom, basic Audio utilities, basic Graphics utilities, Google Chrome, Docker, Epson and Samsung printer drivers, Flash, Java, a LAMP server, Node, DVD and CD-ROM utilities, Spotify, Themes, and other stuff. The scripts are individual, not a one script to rule them all sort of thing.

[link]


Liese S. - Dec 04, 2017 2:28:45 pm PST #25130 of 25496
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

All right, so I realize I do this every couple of years, but I'm looking at my backup system again. I've finally gotten to the point where I have stuff I'm ready to archive.

So, Drew, when you store your long term storage hard drives, how do you do it? Just pull the drives from the enclosure and stick them somewhere?

I think what I'm going to have going forward is:

-Laptop w/ 512g SSD -LaCie w/ 2T HD: working pro tools drive (this could be a 512 SSD if I were willing to pay more for less storage) -other external SSD: plugin & samples drive -Drobo 20T (10 usable) pseudo RAID: Time Machine, Plex media server, medium term storage (work files) -Other enclosure yet tbd, probably repurposed Synology? 4T each long term storage, copy to each of two drives, eventually remove and store as drives fill.

So I'd work the sessions from the LaCie, they'd automatically backup to the Drobo. Then I'd make two copies to the Synology when I was ready to archive the pro tools files.

Does that all seem workable?


NoiseDesign - Dec 04, 2017 4:19:42 pm PST #25131 of 25496
Our wings are not tired

I don't even pull drives from enclosures at this point. Smaller data files (Non audio and video stuff) is backed up locally to a time machine backup on each of my machines as well as being backed up to iCloud.

A/V files for projects are backed up short term to a local Time Machine drive in the studio, and then when projects are completed they are backed up to a network Drobo. As I need more space I swap larger drives into the Drobo.

Media files like the iTunes library and a few other things are stored on a local Drobo connected to the iMac on my desk in the office and then I also pay for iTunes Match so that they are backed up in the cloud.


Liese S. - Dec 04, 2017 6:49:12 pm PST #25132 of 25496
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

So, but when you swap out the smaller drives from the network Drobo, are you retaining those? Or you've just got enough capacity in the network Drobo that you just expand the volumes and then leave everything on there?

Incidentally, the Synology is well and truly dead, it seems, and the old old Buffalo Terastation did not survive the move. Neither did my Roland monitors, but that's another story.

So I guess I'd buy another Drobo for the long term storage, maybe?


NoiseDesign - Dec 04, 2017 9:25:10 pm PST #25133 of 25496
Our wings are not tired

I have a 5 drive Drobo that currently has a totally of 9 TB of storage and I'm running two drive redundancy so I can have complete failure of a drive and when it's replace all my data is restored. I think my last drive was a 6 TB mechanism, so when I do the next replacement I'll gain at least a couple of terabytes of space.


Liese S. - Dec 05, 2017 12:01:23 pm PST #25134 of 25496
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Ok, that makes sense. Thanks for the help again!