I'll probably be "ok"...as I'm not planning to put my hard drive into the way of an earthquake or fire...... Seriously, I love vinyl as much as anyone...and I also dig CD's, but for ease of listening at the push of a button, nothing can beat the convenience of having your music digitized (of course, I am ignoring the audiophile arguments, I'm just speaking to convenience) and if you digitize at a nice high bit rate, the sound quality is pretty good. With either a ROKU or a TiVo or several other methods, you can listen on your regular stereo system, with or without wires.....and many new receivers come with their own networking tools. I don't understand the big aversion to having to have a backup disk or two? I've got a terabyte disc pretty much filled with music, and I've got a backup terabyte disk, also filled with the same music...well, not exactly, but I keep it updated on a regular basis (losing five or six newer recordings is much more palatable than losing an entire collection). One is at home, the other is at work...if one of them starts acting fussy, or outright fails, then I would immediately create another backup on a fresh new drive off of the other copy.. I figure the likelihood of BOTH failing at the exact same time to be about as likely as that of an earthquake, fire or tornado. And if that WERE to happen, then I guess I would deal with it the same way as I would with the loss of the physical copies....shit happens, you get over it and move on. Regards, Steve -----Original Message----- From: audities-owner@smoe.org [mailto:audities-owner@smoe.org] On Behalf Of Jaimie Vernon Sent: Wednesday, February 04, 2009 10:43 AM To: audities@smoe.org Subject: Here a byte, there a bite.... Lee wrote: > Standard safety - for every external drive you buy - buy 2 more for > backups. Rotate one of them off site to another location occasionally. > > I would recommend backing up manually - things can happen to trash your main > drive - then an automated backup process copies the trashed version over - > so now you have 2 trashed copies! the third off site drive helps here as > well. > > You can get 3 terabyte external drives for less than $500. The apocalypse is at hand, dear music lovers. Never thought I'd see the day when THIS geek speak would be a necessity in relation to MUSIC. For the better part of 50 years the ONLY conversation about storing one's music collection dealt with how many shelves you needed (and where). In the last 5 years we not only concern ourselves with storing our music, but the fear of LOSING it. How many people do you know who've lost music collections in fires and earthquakes? How many people do you know who've lost music collections on hard drives? I'll take my chances with the fires and earthquakes, thank you very much. There's a greater chance I'll still have my music collection in 5 years if they're NOT on hard drives. Jaimie Vernon, President, Bullseye Records CDs http://www.bullseyecanada.com MP3s http://www.bullseyesongs.com RADIO: http://www.radiothatdoesntsuck.com SWAG: http://www.cafepress.com/bullseyecanada Author, Canadian Pop Music Encyclopedia http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Pop_Encyclopedia/ PERSONAL http://www.myspace.com/jaimievernonsmovingtargetz BLOG http://verminator.livejournal.com _________________________________________________________________ So many new options, so little time. Windows Live Messenger. http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowslive/messenger.aspx================= ====================================================== Detailed Audities-List information: To manage your Audities List settings or unsubscribe: