"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
That is true Ink... I told him I would help him along.Here is a lesson for everyone, two days ago my server went down. I went reboot it and one of my hard drives went down... no big deal, I have 3/4 still running. Before I even had a chance to pull that drive out another one has gone down.Now I'm dead... all lost. This is why backups are SO important... just hard to backup 3+TB of junk. I'm still gonna pluck away and see if I can't bring it back alive.
If you don't like updates I'm not sure apple is the answer. apple tries to update more on windows than windows does. Linux has a lot of updates as well, but it is amazing at how it updates every bit, even the basic applications can be easily updated.
Quote from: Gilligan on September 25, 2012, 09:16:36 AMThat is true Ink... I told him I would help him along.Here is a lesson for everyone, two days ago my server went down. I went reboot it and one of my hard drives went down... no big deal, I have 3/4 still running. Before I even had a chance to pull that drive out another one has gone down.Now I'm dead... all lost. This is why backups are SO important... just hard to backup 3+TB of junk. I'm still gonna pluck away and see if I can't bring it back alive.Yes, and I appreciate the offer. Still in flux about which direction to go....After a recent "backup schemes" googling orgy I had, I read on a site somewhere that raids have a much higher failure rate than you would expect, complete with data loss. Worse in fact, than many other backup scenarios, and it was sobering. I wish I could find that site. I can't remember if they were positing that raids were actually responsible, or if they were just in the immediate vicinity of the crime.It about convinced me to stay away from raids, but I'm the least tech savvy (defacto) Systems Administrator I've ever known of.
Quote from: Gilligan on September 24, 2012, 10:25:25 PMIf you don't like updates I'm not sure apple is the answer. apple tries to update more on windows than windows does. Linux has a lot of updates as well, but it is amazing at how it updates every bit, even the basic applications can be easily updated.I am not quite sure I can parse your update comment. I think it's supposed to be a joke? I get OSX updates infrequently enough that I don't think about it and it doesn't even steal focus to tell me there are updates let alone force a restart.I used Ubuntu for a year once and that was enough. It can be a complete solution, but it isn't like you are going to install it and hit the ground running.I seem to recall someone saying that Linux on a desktop computer is only a good idea if you like to think of your computer as a hobby.
I run a software raid setup... having multiples of the cards as a backup in case the card fails just to immediately switch to another card (likely that card will be outdated when you have a failure) wasn't worth it to me.It has had it's issues... but mobo dies or even completely moving it to a new system and all I have to do is rebuild it in the configurations. So far. No telling what is waiting for me at home right now though. Not many production servers out there today that doesn't implement a raid or two though... hard to argue with that. Things are a changing but that is still a ways to go for us.Oh, and I forgot to mention, I don't run any desktop linux systems... I finally got to the point where I said "I want to use my computer, not fight it or compromise constantly". I love the idea of linux as a desktop and MANY of the cool features/gadgets that windows/OS X gets comes from the linux world as they are pushing the boundaries of the computer interface... but it's a full time job.