0

Apple Time Capsule

Posted by Ub3rG33k on Mar 18, 2010 in Apple

As mention in my Happy Mac Day post I was awaiting delivery of the Apple Time Capsule ,and as assumed it did arrive today.

I have to say, Apple once again made setting up and installing this device an absolute pleasure !

Below are the unboxing pics

..and finally a picture of it inplace

Now in true Apple style, the setup was flawless, I put it on the shelf, I plugged it in, and that was it ! The iMacs and MacBook Pro all popped up with a prompt saying Time Capsule detected, do you want to set up Time Machine ?

Click yes, input the password and your away.

Did this on all the Macs in the house. The initial backup took a little while, however after that there is a silent hourly backup which you don’t even notice, and it’s good to know my data is now safe !

As you can see from the last image, I’m a little paranoid about my data, on the left I have the 2TB Acer Aspire Easystore, in the middle I have the 500GB Western Digital My Book World, and obviously on the right is the Time Capsule.

I tend to store the majority of my data on the EasyStore as this is set up with Raid 5, giving 1.5Tb of storage and losing only 500Gb to the parity recovery. I did use the MyBookWorld, however upgrading the firmware broke it, and had to spend the best part of a week recovering the data.

So with all this backup, why have I got the time capsule you may ask ?, well let me tell you.

I have a tendency of keeping an extremely clean desktop. If possible I will have nothing on it, however will use it as a temporary file store for the work I’m currently doing. Once I’ve done I tend to just delete everything, and then empty the recycle bin. Unfortunately on more than 1 occasion I’ve needed one of the files I’ve deleted.

Another reason is because C doesn’t tend to use the EasyStore as much as I, and tend to keep everything on her desktop on her iMac and MacBookPro, which means if the worst case happened, she would lose everything !

All in all, I’m very happy with this addition to my network, and can highly recommend getting one if you have a Mac

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
4

Acer Aspire Easystore 2TB NAS drive

Posted by Ub3rG33k on Jan 15, 2009 in Tech

I’ve added to my toy collection, I’ve bought (as the title would suggest) a new NAS Drive.

I’ve has for the pass couple of years a 500Gb Western Digital MyBookWorld, which as ….well ok, well, slow, unstable, and over heats all the time.

I had quite a manual process to back this up too, I had to keep a machine on all the time, to run a scheduled task, to sync all the contents on the NAS drive to an external 500Gb hard drive, this was effective, however kind of overkill for a simple backup solution.

btw, the reason I’m so paranoid about backup, is a new firmware came out for the NAS drive, so I thought “OOOO, possible speed increase”, so upgraded, and it fell over Grrrrrr !, you can only imagine the paid and suffering I went though to a retrieve the content from the drive, the rebuild the linux partitions….not something I really want go through again.

Anyway, back to the Acer NAS drive, this drive is quick !, and I mean really quick !! (ok, getting around 18Mb /sec transfer speed, so about 3 times faster that the MyBookWorld)

It’s got an Itunes and Media server which supports Vob files (a god send for me streaming HD content to my PS3.

Currently running in Raid 5 (as raid 10 (0+1) isn’t available, so getting high read speeds, ok’ish write speeds, and 1.5TB of parity backup storage :)

It does come with Wireless access too, however this is switched off as it’s connected to my Gigabit network.

Technical specifications

Processor
Marvell® 88F5281
Hard disk drive
SATA
RAID level support
Levels 0, 1, 5, JBOD
Disk drives
4 x Serial ATA Hard Drives
Raw capacity
1 or 2 TB
I/O ports
One RJ-45 port
Networking
10/100/1000 Ethernet, auto MDI/MDIX
WLAN: 802.11b/g
Network protocol
FTP/SMB
Network service protocols
DHCP client/server
TCP/IP
SMB
SMTP
HTTP/HTTPS
DLNA HNv1
NTP/SNTP
Audio file support
MP3, WAV/PCM, WMA, AC3/AAC, OGG, AIF/AIFF
Video file support
VOB, AVI, MPEG2, MPEG4, WMV9
Playlist support
M3U, PLS, WPL, RMP, ASX
Image file support
JPG, BMP, GIF, TIF, PNG
System OS
Embedded Linux®
Network Client OS
Windows Vista®
Windows® XP
Windows® 2000
Linux®
Mac OS® X
Dimensions
16 x 18 x 21 cm
Weight
5.3 kg
Power supply
19 V 150 W external power adapter

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Copyright © 2012 UB3RG33K All rights reserved. Theme by Laptop Geek.