Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/12/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> It sure does feel nice to get all these welcomes back. I sincerely > appreciate it. > > This is probably old hat to all now. I searched the archives, but > didn't come up with anything. > > I mentioned that I bought a Mac (MacBook Pro 13" screen). I run > Lightroom on it and got myself to believe I would just use it for > quick stuff while I was out and away. > > Turned out that it became more and more my standard machine and > backups started to become an issue. In my other work (the one that > pays) I need a lot of storage space. "Too much" space is not a > concept. Anyway, I ran into Amazon Simple Storage Services. > > To make a long story short, if you store 1 gb (just lost this letter > because I hit the command-4 to get a $ instead of the alt-4 and had to > start over ... thinking about squirting some epoxy glue under that > right-hand command key) 1 gb will cost 15 cents a month, 10 gb (real > careful now) $ (made it) $1.50 a month. > > I use it under GNU Linux at work and Mac OS X at home. > > I download s3tools (a small set of Python scripts) ... there's > probably a graphical interface too, but what I like about the MacBook > is the command-line. (http://s3tools.org) > > Start an account with AWS, get the access key, run the configuration > for the scrips (which involves telling it what your secret access key > is) and then: > > 1) cd > 2) s3cmd sync ./Pictures s3://photo-archive.dlridings.se/macbook/ > > and go to bed. It takes a while to upload everything the first time. > > Then, after I've done some more work and want to save it, I just do > the same thing: > > 1) cd > 2) s3cmd sync ./Pictures s3://photo-archive.dlridings.se/macbook/ > > But the second time it just synchronizes my local files on the MacBook > with the files that are up there in the blue. If the local ones > haven't changed, it doesn't upload them again. > > s3cmd ls > > will list your "buckets" (my bucket above is > s3://photo-archive.dlridings.se) Everything else is an object. It kind > of looks like they are files and directories > (s3://photo-archive.dlridings.se/macbook/Pictures/Lightroom/etc) but > all of the slashes after the bucket name are just letters in the > filenames, not really directories. > > It's just as easy to get things back. You can access them from > anywhere that you have an internet connection. No more USB drives > weighing you down when you're on the road. > > Pretty nice stuff, and that's only the start. You can do quite a lot > using their services. > > http://aws.amazon.com/s3 > > SMUGMUG bases their system on it. The files can be private or public, > so you can use them in web applications etc. > > It _does_ cost a litte (also pennies) to transfer the files, but once > they are there, they cost max (careful now) $.15 a gigabyte a month. > > You can have your buckets reside in the US or the EU. It doesn't make > any difference from a usage point of view. No matter where your > "bucket" is, you can access it over the net. You just might save some > speed across the wire. > > If you have a whole turdload of files, you can send them a hard disk > and they'll off-load it directly onto their internal net. > > Nice back-up solution. If anyone can think of serious down-sides, I'd > appreciate hearing about it. I'm pretty reliant on it. > > Daniel > > PS: I'm getting pretty tired of Google maps. Evidently CMD-4 (what I > hit instead of ALT-4) is a shortcut to Google maps. > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information The down side is your body of work is who knows where being looked at and done what with by who knows who. A one tsp hard drive which sits next to your laptop if your doing photo stuff cost $99 dollars and 99 cents. (But I'd spend a few dollars more and get Firewire 800 with an 8 cylinder engine.) And that's enough to store one billion pictures at .0000001 cents a mb. And its in your immediate possession. You're looking at it. In the real world. Smell or a ama. 3D. You name it. Mark William Rabiner