Mailing List AE-List@media-motion.tv ? Message #51606
From: Benny Christensen <benny@producersplayhouse.com>
Subject: Re: [AE] Non cloud backup solutions for solo freelancers?
Date: Thu, 14 Nov 2013 08:46:55 -0600
To: After Effects Mail List <AE-List@media-motion.tv>
There was a Thunderbolt LTO6 drive announced recently. USB3 would plenty fast enough for me though. And 2.5TB per tape for about $80US is the best price per GB once you amortize the drive.

The big deal is the NTFS file system which means that the tapes essentially mount and act like a hard drive.


Benny Christensen
Producers Playhouse
Oklahoma City

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On Nov 13, 2013, at 6:08 PM, Robert Houghton <gfxguy74@gmail.com> wrote:

Ahh yes. I've heard of LTO, I didn't know they required SAS-2 cards though if you didn't want to run it through ethernet. I always figured they would have a USB 2 version somehow. Buying something like this would definitely have to be a cost to the client I think. The bluerays are cheap enough to toss out as a value added thing which is why I like to use them.

   -Rob

On 11/13/2013 3:20 PM, Jim Curtis wrote:
IMO, the best value that's also reliable is LTO.

Last time I researched it, the cheapest systems require a PCIe card.

A SAS HBA PCI card, LTO5 drive, software and cable will set you back about $2000 and up.  Mostly up.

The ethernet LTO drives were around $4-5K, and are more versatile, as anybody on a network can access it.

Clouds are too slow for me for project restoration and archive.

LTO6 is the current version, but the current rev is the most expensive.  LTO5 is plenty fast and big enough for me.

You may not need massive storage like I do.  I do editing as well as GFX, and I'm the de facto archivist for my clients' card media (hours of footage) that comes in on flash and rugged drives.




On Nov 13, 2013, at 4:54 PM, Robert Houghton <gfxguy74@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi all,

   I've been currently using BD-Rom for backup since they have dropped below $1 a disc for cost for non-live storage and an external NAS for live backups (less than 6 months old). Since the average project I'm working on is beginning to get beyond the 25GB limit I was wondering are there any other cost effective backup methods out there? I've heard backing up to hard drives is an option but I've also heard they can become unreliable after being dormant for a while. I'm hesitant to use the cloud merely because of the huge file transfers on Comcast's internet access where they hit you with a 250GB usage limit.

   -Robert

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