[Discuss] pseudo-off-site backup
Laura Conrad
lconrad at laymusic.org
Wed Mar 27 21:42:45 EDT 2013
>>>>> "Tom" == Tom Metro <tmetro+blu at gmail.com> writes:
Tom> John Dvorak on last weekend's This Week in Tech (twit.tv) says
Tom> he keeps a 1 TB portable drive (hopefully encrypted) in his car
Tom> as a pseudo-off-site backup.
Tom> Although way more likely to be damaged along with your house,
Tom> compared to a real off-site backup, I bet if one looked at the
Tom> percentage of cars destroyed along with their affiliated
Tom> houses, the cars probably survive over 50% of the time. (If
Tom> your car resides in a garage in or under your house, that
Tom> likely goes down.)
The person I actually know who would have benefited most from an
offsite backup had all his electronics confiscated by the police when
they found some marijuana plants in his apartment. I don't think having
it in his car would have worked.
Are there really people who don't have somewhere they go regularly that
they can leave a backup at? I use my mother's house because I sometimes
go there for several days and it's theoretically useful for being able
to do work on those days (although I actually usually use the network),
but I have several friends who would let me use their place. Maybe John
Dvorak should get out more?
--
Laura (mailto:lconrad at laymusic.org, twitter: @serpentplayer)
(617) 661-8097 233 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02139
http://www.laymusic.org/ http://www.serpentpublications.org
At dawn, the magpie sings, and by day the black cockatoo wing their
way across a sunny sky. The koala, possum, dingo and carpet snake are
silent on the land below. A mist covers the mountains. We and our
land are crying for you.
Eve Fesl, Matriarch of the Gubbi Gubbi tribe, eulogizing Steve Irwin
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