disneychrista
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2002
- Messages
- 28,661
Yes portable.Do you mean “portable”?
Yes portable.Do you mean “portable”?

Yes, we sync to iCloud. I also have our photos going to Amazon Photos.Apple makes it real easy. I just sync to iCloud. it is subscription but this one I don't mind paying for. My doc folder and photos are automatically synced to the cloud and available across all my devices. I do have an "Important Stuff" folder that I also back up manually on a hard drive and store at my aunt's house.
Oh, okay, thanks. I thought you were speaking of some new 'secret' method. When I take pictures, they are automatically, real time, backed up to my Google Photos account, Verizon cloud account, Dropbox and One Drive.
Thanks again.
I forgot, I use Amazon Photo backup also, in addition to the others I listed. Thanks for the reminder, PC.I also have our photos going to Amazon Photos.

Because I don’t want to lose it all? It is 13,000 songs from various sources.A lot of from CDs I no longer have.Unless it is music you recorded yourself, I don't see the point of backing up publically available music files. Maybe you want to back-up a 'play list' you created but that just stores the names of the music files for replaying.
RAID is not a backup.Bumping this looking for suggestions...
Does anyone have a "go to" Network RAID solution that won't break the bank? I currently have 4 drives (3 USB/1 Internal) for storage totaling ~5.4TB, of which just over 2TB is used. Most of these are pictures and videos. Yes, I can probably clean stuff off, but what's the fun in that?![]()
So, I'd like to get a RAID system to back everything up to. I think 4TB should suffice.
Any suggestions?
A backup is a copy of your data, correct? A RAID is a type of storage. So why cant you use a RAID as a backup destination?RAID is not a backup.
https://www.raidisnotabackup.com/
I have a cheap Synology NAS. Two 8tb drives in a simple mirror.
https://www.synology.com/en-us/products/DS220j
It is not my backup though, just part of my home storage solution.
It can be part of a storage and backup solution but it is not a backup.A backup is a copy of your data, correct? A RAID is a type of storage. So why cant you use a RAID as a backup destination?
Again, it comes down to how you USE it. A RAID can be the destination of a backup.It can be part of a storage and backup solution but it is not a backup.
From the link:
Having a number of disks in RAID may seem like a backup, especially if you’re using a mirrored RAID mode like RAID-1 or RAID-10. But this is wrong!
RAID protects you against one and only one thing: a disk failure. It does not protect you against any of the following things:
Multiple disk failures beyond the RAID level chosen (e.g. both disks in a mirror, or 3 disks in a RAID-6), including possible UREs.
Failure of the RAID controller itself (if applicable), the computer running the RAID, or the environment containing the servers (e.g. a flood, fire, or theft).
Data corruption from filesystem bugs, cosmic rays, or minor hardware or firmware failures, which can and do happen all the time - you usually just don’t notice and software works around it.
Malicious or accidental deletion or modification of files, including by viruses, bad application writes, or administrative mistakes (e.g. rm-ing the wrong file or mkfs on an existing filesystem).
The adage is simple: “RAID replicates everything, instantly, even the stuff you don’t want it to.”
A backup is a copy of your data.Again, it comes down to how you USE it. A RAID can be the destination of a backup.
By the "definition" above, an external HD is not a backup. Actually, according to the article, what DOES qualify a storage solution as a "backup"?
Good for you. I'm not interested in a subscription based solution. I agree cloud would be the best. I dont want to spend that kind of money thoughA backup is a copy of your data.
A RAID array can be a backup if it is a copy of your data but not if it is the primary source of your data.
It can be part of a storage and backup solution.
RAID is about resiliency and availability. Something generally really important to a business but not as important to an individual.
The site even mentions that RAID can be part of your storage strategy:
- A good rule of thumb is three copies: the original (RAID or otherwise); one onsite copy on a different, preferrably offline, medium; and one offsite copy. Store the offsite copy in the cloud, a data vault, or at a friend’s house, just keep it somewhere else.
For most individuals I believe you can get by with just two copies as long as one copy is on a RAID and the other copy is a versioned cloud based copy like BackBlaze.
Some scenarios where a RAID fails an individual as a backup:
1. A house fire, your supposed backup is destroyed.
2. Ransomware, your supposed backup is encrypted and lost forever.
In both those cases I would be protected with BackBlaze.
Can you back-up your music folder on OneDrive? If so how? My Documents & Pictures folders are set to sync but not My Music.
$70 a year to ensure that 20 years worth of digital photos are never lost is a very small price to pay.Good for you. I'm not interested in a subscription based solution. I agree cloud would be the best. I dont want to spend that kind of money though
Thank you. I will give that a try. I am still figuring out one drive.One Drive has a drag & drop feature. Just be aware, you have to log into your One Drive account a couple times a year. If you are just planning on using it as a back up and leaving stuff there, and not backing up often, it might NOT be there later if you don't log in during the necessary time frame.
That happened to me.Microsoft cut DOWN the amount of GBs it was giving out for free AND they imposed a log in every so often. They informed people - in their Microsoft emails - which I never use. I only opened the MS email account for the backup storage. My real email is elsewhere. So, I missed the deadline to log in and they deleted all my backed up data on 2 accounts.
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Thank God, I had also backed up the data on my Google Drive accounts. This is why I firmly believe in the Rule of 3, in the article I linked to earlier.
Ok, THAT kind of pricing IS good. With the amount of pics I have (2+ Tb), I was seeing $70 per MONTH..$70 a year to ensure that 20 years worth of digital photos are never lost is a very small price to pay.
The initial backup can take some time depending on your internet upload speed. If you have data caps that can be problematic.Ok, THAT kind of pricing IS good. With the amount of pics I have (2+ Tb), I was seeing $70 per MONTH..