|
|
#1 |
|
Online Video Backup
Does anyone here use an online backup service for their videos, such as Carbonite, Mozy, Amazon S3, etc? If so, what are your opinions of the service? Is there a total upload limit and a limit per file? Does the service compress the files? I would prefer a service that doesn't compress so that there is no chance of any file corruption during the compress/decompression process. I am hoping to find a service that offers per-file transfers of at least the 16GB limit of the SDHC card I use on my Canon camera.
Thanks in advance |
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
#2 | |
|
Quote:
Mobile Me does this perfectly. 20GB plus extensions if you want. It's $100 USD a year. |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#3 |
|
Uploading HD or even DV video files to MobileMe, or any other back up site, can take forever depending on your internet connection speed. I would recommend a external hard drive. They are more money but in my opinion much better, and worth it. For regular file back-ups the sites and MobileMe are fine but for huge video files, I would stay away from that bandwidth hog. Look at G-Technology and CalDigit for Final Cut and iMovie files. And do you realize how small 16GB of data transfer a month is, especially with video? And the 20GB on MobileMe is just over an hour and a half of DV footage. I don't think that is very suitable.
MobileMe does not compress files and allows 200GB of data transfer a month on an individual account of 20GB. I use my MM account for documents and images I can transport through my different computers without using a USB drive. Regards, David
__________________
iForum Rules Nazi |
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
#4 | |
|
Mozy vs Carbonite
Quote:
Mozy works quite well. I've been using them for a couple of years. The only problem is they limit upload speed to 768Kbs (recent policy change). Too slow for lots of video uploads. I tried out Carbonite recently but they sucked big time. I only tried them because I read some positive reviews, turns out Carbonite likes to post fake reviews as exposed by David Pogue. Their upload speed was slightly faster but only for the first few GB's, then it would hang all the time on my uploads. The software is designed for dummies which I didn't like. Their support is terrible, every email I sent returned a canned response which kept assuming I was on PC even though they have a different email address for Mac users. I do not recommend using them. In summary, if you have a lot of files, go external hard drive. Mozy is ok for smaller upload batches. Amazon S3 is the blue ribbon solution but I found the cost prohibitive for large amounts of data, price out 50GB/month.
__________________
MP 2010, 27" and 24" CinemaDisplay, MiniServer, MBA 13" Ultimate, TimeCapsule, iPhone 4S, ATV 1&2, iPad3 3G |
||
|
|
0
|
|
|
#5 | |
|
Quote:
Last edited by ESPCCTV; Nov 27, 2012 at 05:45 PM. Reason: edit text |
||
|
|
0
|
![]() |
|
«
Previous Thread
|
Next Thread
»
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Online HD backup? | ricof | MacBook Pro | 7 | Dec 6, 2009 06:03 AM |
| MBP becomes exceptionally hot while playing online videos / Skype video | fatgorilla | MacBook Pro | 4 | Jun 21, 2009 07:25 AM |
| Best Online photo backup | rh535 | Mac Basics and Help | 8 | Mar 7, 2009 08:43 PM |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:14 AM.









Linear Mode

