- Joined
- Oct 23, 2020
- Messages
- 1,919
To add my story here: I started with PCs in 1990 on a 286 with a 42 MB hard disk (Seagate ST251-1), which about one year later had issues with faulty sectors. This was a couple of years before (consumer) hard disks started to internally re-map bad sectors. This was the first and last time that I lost data. Ever since, I have been paranoid about backups (and more importantly restores).
I started with simple floppy disks for source code, spreadsheets, etc. and went on for a DAT streamer in 1996. This only lasted 3 years and after that abysmal experience I switched to a QIC streamer, which lasted until about 2008. Well, that's when I put it out of service. It was in perfect working condition but 12 GB capacity per cartridge started to be an issue. Since then I have used hard disks in various ways, since streamers have become a prohibitive upfront investment for me. I would still prefer streamers, but that is a different story.
All the people I know (incl. at work) initially think of my efforts as overkill. Until they loose 10 years of digital pictures, esp. when children are involved. That is when they are willing to invest time and money. The same goes for many companies, unfortunately. A friend told me about a malware attack on his employer about a year ago. All of a sudden there was budget for keeping backups longer than just 30 days, a properly segmented network, and other things their IT department had wanted for more than a decade. Everybody (incl. me - see above) has to learn this the hard way, I guess.
A side note on NAS gear that is typically more in the consumer space. I am currently in the process of switching to a new FreeNAS box. There were long deliberations as to whether I should go for Synology instead. The core reason why I stayed with FreeNAS is that it I have flexibility. From a usability and ease-of-use perspective I got the impression that Synology is (far?) superior. But that comes at the price of simplicity. A mass market product needs to keep support tickets under control and the only way for that is to limit people's options. And I wanted to stay flexible, even if that meant to spend more money (hardware specs are not comparable to the Synology model in question) and time for setting things up.
Finally, I am not going for TrueNAS 12 right now but start with FreeNAS 11.3 U5. Yes, I have seen and read many highly positive comments about v12 and how stable it is. But IMHO nobody can be really sure for a couple of weeks that no hidden errors exist. I work in the enterprise software space and I don't know of any customer that went into production with a x.0 version of our products. You simply don't do that.
I started with simple floppy disks for source code, spreadsheets, etc. and went on for a DAT streamer in 1996. This only lasted 3 years and after that abysmal experience I switched to a QIC streamer, which lasted until about 2008. Well, that's when I put it out of service. It was in perfect working condition but 12 GB capacity per cartridge started to be an issue. Since then I have used hard disks in various ways, since streamers have become a prohibitive upfront investment for me. I would still prefer streamers, but that is a different story.
All the people I know (incl. at work) initially think of my efforts as overkill. Until they loose 10 years of digital pictures, esp. when children are involved. That is when they are willing to invest time and money. The same goes for many companies, unfortunately. A friend told me about a malware attack on his employer about a year ago. All of a sudden there was budget for keeping backups longer than just 30 days, a properly segmented network, and other things their IT department had wanted for more than a decade. Everybody (incl. me - see above) has to learn this the hard way, I guess.
A side note on NAS gear that is typically more in the consumer space. I am currently in the process of switching to a new FreeNAS box. There were long deliberations as to whether I should go for Synology instead. The core reason why I stayed with FreeNAS is that it I have flexibility. From a usability and ease-of-use perspective I got the impression that Synology is (far?) superior. But that comes at the price of simplicity. A mass market product needs to keep support tickets under control and the only way for that is to limit people's options. And I wanted to stay flexible, even if that meant to spend more money (hardware specs are not comparable to the Synology model in question) and time for setting things up.
Finally, I am not going for TrueNAS 12 right now but start with FreeNAS 11.3 U5. Yes, I have seen and read many highly positive comments about v12 and how stable it is. But IMHO nobody can be really sure for a couple of weeks that no hidden errors exist. I work in the enterprise software space and I don't know of any customer that went into production with a x.0 version of our products. You simply don't do that.
Last edited: