Free: Contests & Raffles.
picture speaks 1000 words
Editing is one thing. Storage is another. If your current editing needs are met, consider a NAS. There are some very nice large ones that are raid. Plop it in a wired gigabit network, and you'd have a pretty decent storage option. Here's an example.http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822165596
computer is long past due for an upgrade, I've got room for a full tower no problem
Quote from: Fl0und3rz on November 05, 2015, 11:02:59 AMEditing is one thing. Storage is another. If your current editing needs are met, consider a NAS. There are some very nice large ones that are raid. Plop it in a wired gigabit network, and you'd have a pretty decent storage option. Here's an example.http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822165596That looks pretty interesting, I like that it has RAID 1 to mirror files plus you can access your files from anywhere over the internet.
I'm getting ready to build a computer designed for picture and media storage and editing. Anyone done so I'd like to see some specs?I know I want m.2 for the OS for nearly instant on, and stacked HDD's in a raid 1 (I've lost picts before and still hear about it all the time) I'll post some specs from newegg here later, I lost my shopping cart
Quote from: KFhunter on November 05, 2015, 11:17:53 AMcomputer is long past due for an upgrade, I've got room for a full tower no problemI'd still consider a NAS in addition to the RAID in a new desktop. It's cheap insurance. With the RAID in the desktop, I would have a separate drive for the OS and use the RAID array just for storage. Once you get the desktop set up, you can image the OS drive and store it on the RAID array for easy OS drive failure restoration. The only files I have lost since about 1994 have been about 6 months of emails due to a laptop drive failure.I don't have any specific hardware recommendations, as I am still running a seven year old build and haven't looked into hardware specs in ages.
just found out I don't have unlimited internet and hit a soft cap throttle NETFLIX!
Vint Cerf, the internet pioneer, said it was time to start preserving the vast quantities of digital data which are produced before they are lost forever.Warning that the 21st century could become a second "Dark Ages" because so much data is now kept in digital format, he said that future generations would struggle to understand our society because technology is advancing so quickly that old files will be inaccessible.Speaking at a conference in San Jose, California, Mr Cerf likened the problem to the Dark Ages, the period in Britain between the 5th and 8th centuries where little is known, following the collapse of the Roman Empire
USB 3.0 is nice to have for getting pictures off of memory cards.