Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 24th Apr 2012 17:39 UTC
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RE[4]: What about... - data redundancy
by galvanash on Wed 25th Apr 2012 16:45
in reply to "RE[3]: What about... - data redundancy"
To get the data redundancy and such, you'd likely need a drop-pi module that lets' it talk to S3 or similar hosted storage providers. Your little cloud needs a cloud-daddy or you may as well just carry a USB for all the benefit your gaining.
For a home user that just wants to get to their files and maybe share them with others? I don't think data redundancy even makes the top 20 for needed features. Besides, redundancy is sort of already built in - every device that is synced has a copy of the data. They will likely have a home computer - they setup it up to sync with the device and they have redundancy - not automatic recovery of course, but still.
The benefit (as opposed to a USB stick) is that you can access the files remotely (and you can give others access to those files as well). Its folder sync - that's all it really needs to be at first.
There is of course nothing really keeping you from implementing such a feature. You could pretty easily store a copy in S3, even encrypted. I just don't think it is something that most people would actually care much about.
Edited 2012-04-25 16:49 UTC




Member since:
2007-09-06
To get the data redundancy and such, you'd likely need a drop-pi module that lets' it talk to S3 or similar hosted storage providers. Your little cloud needs a cloud-daddy or you may as well just carry a USB for all the benefit your gaining.
Mind you, at that point the question becomes; why are you not simply using the storage provider's client app instead of your drop-pi intermediary hardware.
For big budgets, one could also look at SpiderOak's appliance which is pretty much what you are trying to recreate.
Still, it's an interesting idea. The first thought when looking at Dropbox was "if they had an appliance that moved this thing inside my own network..".