My big data-loss fear is a household robbery - so offsite is essential. Have you considered a scenario that involves losing your Mac and your backup drives?
How have you found it? I tried it out and found it was something like 45 days to run a full backup on my 1TB machine, and discontinued it fairly immediately.
Unison via SSH to a Raspberry-Pi-attached USB HDD. Upload to Flickr via cron-triggered python script from RasPi. Arq to S3. Hoping that "only to camlistore" will be the answer in 3-5 years.
My photos are very important to me, so i do several backups:
1) The iPhoto Library is rsync'd to an external HDD
2) The iPhoto Library is rsync'd to a local FreeNAS box
3) Arq backup to S3 http://www.haystacksoftware.com/arq/
4) Crashplan backup to 3 locations: an external drive, a local server (not the FreeNAS box), as well as Crashplan central.
I use duplicity (http://duplicity.nongnu.org) to locally encrypt (GPG) and backup to a LAN machine running ZFS and to one or more cloud services (Google, AWS) depending on the data. This is automated using cron.
Whatever backup option you decide on, do not forget to test the recovery/restore process at least once a year. You can tweak your strategy anytime based on current cloud storage prices.
Manual backup to external HDD + automatic backup to google drive with this app https://support.google.com/picasa/answer/4392268
I also like the opportunity to view these photos through Google+ Photos interface.
AWS Bucket w/revisions enabled connected to PictureLife.com. Amazon raises invoices directly to me for storage usage and if PictureLife shuts down (hopefully not) then there's no need to export data because I own/control the data. ie. AWS provides the hosting and PictureLife provides the product on-top of my hosting.
19 comments
[ 1311 ms ] story [ 2373 ms ] threadI then pray my HDD doesn't fail!
One day I'll get organised and backup everything up to one of those 1TB NAS with auto-cloud sync :S
Let's just say that was more than 45 days ago....
Terabytes are cheap, memories are not.
Whatever backup option you decide on, do not forget to test the recovery/restore process at least once a year. You can tweak your strategy anytime based on current cloud storage prices.
Drive is the authoritive store for my photo's - any thing on my PC can be lost with no problems
CrashPlan family edition (unlimited backups for up to ten computers) for both of us, the Linux file server and my parents laptops as well.