Home Backup Strategies and Home Media Storage
Sara and I are starting to accumulate a lot of media. We like to spend time traveling when we can, and I'm learning how to take decent pictures, and these combined mean we have quite a few photos and this seems to be accelerating. We both listen to a lot of music. We both enjoy watching movies and TV shows. I particularly enjoy watching sporting events in HD and Blu-Ray movies (The Wife couldn't care less). We also each have a laptop, an iphone and we've got an ipod or two from several years kicking around. I feel like this scenario is pretty typical for couples/families these days, and is only worse if you've got a couple of teenagers to multiply the gadgetry. We also have a nice television a Blu-Ray player in the living room, but often prefer to watch movies or TV Shows in bed upstairs.
For those of us who are the home technology guy, this kind of setup can really be a pain for making sure that media is available, that you can access it concurrently (e.g. if NC State is playing but Sara wants to watch a Blu-Ray title), and that it's all backed up. Recently I rethought our entire strategy and implemented the following setup, which I'm really happy with. I'll provide more updates as I flesh things out more.
Backups
We had been using a TimeCapsule (1TB) but we were having problems running out of space, and I'd had one die after about 10 months. For our backups, I had the following criterion:
- Simple and automated - I shouldn't have to think about backups.
- Local and remote - backing up to a time capsule or external hard drive is nice, but not when your house burns down or your car is stolen.
- Cross platform - I run Windows 7, Mac OS X, and Linux (Ubuntu).
- Available - I don't want to have to boot up a machine or have one running just to back up.
- Media specific stores - ideally, I wanted to be able to segment out certain media (music, TV Shows, etc.) to be separate from our machine backups. This would let me transfer media between machines and also get around space limitations on individual machines.
- Synology DS410 Network Attached Storage (NAS) with four 1.5TB drives in RAID 5 giving us about 4TB of storage.
- APC Smart-UPS 750
- Repurposed Apple Time Capsule to function as a Wireless Access Point and Gigabit switch.
- Backblaze cloud based backup.