• melbaboutown@aussie.zone
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    4 hours ago

    Yeah I was surprised I even dared to go for it. I guess I hadn’t heard people saying it was hard so I wasn’t scared to try, and if it wasn’t good it was a skill issue so just try harder.

    Thanks, I could use any tips. I’m still getting into the habit of backups and probably don’t know how to use a NAS.

    I’ve got Google drive but my stuff is split over a few email addys and also I kinda don’t trust it not to fail :/

    I’ve lost so much to crashes, been really slack. Sounds dumb because I managed to teach myself some stuff that’s more advanced and took a short course on computer repair trying to get up to speed. But due to a weird long term laziness I’m just not familiar or comfortable with the backup and restore processes which should be 101.

    • indisin@aussie.zone
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      3 hours ago

      Hands again, omg, it’s easy to draw shitty hands but even half decent ones I cannot do and I love drawing and have a dedicated art room and station… So well done ❤️

      NAS’s are really simple these days, they’re pretty much plug and play. I use QNAP but I know Synology are suited better to my personal use case. All my stuff on my QNAP is 1 click install, e.g. Plex. Everything is so easy, including personal media back ups.

      If you’re doing just data storage and media stuff an ARM cpu is completely fine with a just a GB of RAM, more is always better. But it’s annoying when you’re hacking and need to compile for ARM to spin up docker containers. So AMD or Intel x64 is best if you wanna go nuts at hacking at shit. And if not you can always supplement your NAS with NUC or more raspberry pis.

      I don’t think that’ll be an issue for you. Think of them as mini dedicated servers for local backups and media storage and sharing that can be used for a lot more. They are a private local cloud. Again very very easy to use and have mobile apps.

      So then it just getting the stuff you want onto those drives however you’re comfortable. I prefer automated but it’s obviously easier for anyone not in tech to do it manually with a drag and drop, or upload from the app.

      RAID options are a choice too and should be read up on. I YOLO (only) 2 of my drives in RAID 0 which is going to trigger some people reading this but with a gigabit connection to Usenet I’d prefer the performance as it can be rebuilt.

      The Google drive side, you could consolidate that and backup it to AWS S3 too and put it in cold storage? That’s possibly too complex for you unless you like this kinda thing.

      Losing things to crashes though is very abnormal. That’s symptoms of many things so can you give more details?

      Also having a NAS is ftw!.. My partner is saying no to the full rack mount haha

      Edit1: typos and sentence structure which still sucks. And if you don’t understand any acronyms then happy to expand.

      Edit2: Be aware this is going to cost you. If $1k bothers you walk away. Happy to price up your setup if you let me know your storage requirements.

      Edit3: You can get cheaper solutions but in my experience they’re unreliable and less extensible.

      • melbaboutown@aussie.zone
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        3 hours ago

        lol that’s all Greek to me but thanks, I’ve made a note to try and figure it out.

        Basically it was my own lack of planning and consistency. I was too lazy or distracted to backup consistently, head full of whatever I was busy with, or gave/lent my backed-up-on-cd music collection to someone else I didn’t stay in contact with. Then my computer would get a virus or a component would break and that was it. Or I lost stuff in moves, or a hard drive I kept to try and salvage later got irreparably damaged in storage.

        I still have some kept drives I might try to get data off when I figure out how to do it safely. I know there are a few ways of doing data recovery and I have at least once managed to get a computer going again with a bootable Linux usb just long enough to grab the important stuff. I’ve even used it to rescue scan and find viruses that hid from the AV. Another time I manually put the drive in a drive enclosure.

        But with some it might still be risky. I know at least one forces you to enter your Microsoft password to log in (at least while in the computer) which I don’t want to do on a compromised device. I haven’t tried to see if the Linux usb can bypass that or if that’s guarded against. I’m also not sure if there’s any ‘protections’ against accessing data while the drive is out of the machine but I do know that stuff exists with some hard drives so we will see.

        Anything I know about computers I had to teach myself, so despite trying to catch up there’s knowledge gaps and lack of experience with some things.

        Idk the old drives aren’t urgent. I think for now I’ll focus on getting anything important and possibly time sensitive downloaded to local and then back it up to the hard drive I have, and the hard drives can wait til I have the brain space to deal with it.

        • indisin@aussie.zone
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          2 hours ago

          You don’t need to figure it out mate, I can explain anything you need me to. Been hacking since the commodore 64 days and I love to teach.

          I understand about the lost music, I have so much locally backed up music in my birth country, music that doesn’t exist anywhere anymore. No one has the skills to boot it up or can be arsed sending my stacks of backups for me to sort, share and preserve…

          Why you getting viruses? Too many porn.exe downloads hehe? Your talking about the risk of a boot sector virus and if you have one of those, wtf were you doing lol?

          Yeah a Linux USB bootable stick can help if it can read those non native partition formats. Different file system after all, they try but don’t always succeed. Those recovery programs are useful but if you’ve used the device those bits have potentially been mutated so best of luck.

          Do you have a spare PC to throw this in and air gap it if you’re that concerned? What kinda of drives are they? Could you connect it to a cheap raspberry pi if you’re really worried?

          Also pretty much certain your drive isn’t bitlocked or you have any concerns outside of your data being unretrievable because of a head crash.

          Learning is fun so keep doing it!

          And yeah, local is fun. But having cloud backups too is also prudent if you really care about the data. You can also still burn things to discs!

          (Apologies if I’ve missed anything, lot to reply to and am on mobile)

          • melbaboutown@aussie.zone
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            1 hour ago

            Cheers, didn’t really get taught any of this. Haha no pr0n.exe downloads! Just past lack of education about net safety or didn’t shell out for good AV, or maybe forgot regular updates.

            Most are various laptop drives within the 15 year old range. I forget what connections.

            It happened to the desktop a few times but I just shelved the old drive for later retrieval, put in fresh drive and installed OS again…😶 Seaview, maybe SATA. Replaced it with a SSD. I’d have to find it.

            Fingers crossed that’s it’s not the heads because that’s actual physical damage I think. But it’s usually that something else broke, or there was something bad on there I didn’t trust I had the skills to completely clean.

            Spare pc is a possibility, I just would have to back up and wipe an old laptop and I’m kind of struggling with day to day chores as is. Also it feels like wasting a pc by exposing a safe one if that makes sense?

            (Also can you have separate backups on the same external drive? As in you can keep many different versions and from different computers without anything getting overwritten?

            I think so but I’ve usually had to kind of just do a quick bandaid solution to get my computer going again, and have had fears of reinfecting by restoring data in the wrong way.)

            I could buy a raspberry pi as they’re cheap but I don’t know if I have the brain cells for the learning curve rn.

            It should be ok. I just need to back up social media pics locally first, then grab the stuff from other cloud storage, and then back the computer/s up. (And try to grab contact info of establish an outside connection in case social media requires ID in like a year.) The drives are sitting there and hopefully won’t get damaged or lost before I can get to them.