iPad Pro 2020 12.9“ 256 GB Wifi. Having no iPad yet I don’t care if it is a huge update compared to the last version or not
It replaces my trusty 2011 MacBook Air. Will be trying to go iPad only! (granted, I have a 2019 27“ iMac at home)
You know you can't shoot the virus right?Just bought all of these parts and put this together.
You know you can't shoot the virus right?
You aren't bothered that the flat cables have no shielding?Oh and also a 10m flat network 10GBe cable for another project!
Nice.Bought these three pieces from Displate to hang above my gaming setup.
I pre-ordered some instrumental boom bap (digital download) on Bandcamp.
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Also, I took the plunge with a cloud backup provider and purchased a subscription with Arq.
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A local backup like TM is good because it's (usually) faster than a backup over the Internet, and its usually easier to restore data - either a file or two, or a complete system. But due to it's close proximity, it's vulnerable to some of the same risks your Mac is, like physical damage or theft, i.e. if your house floods or burns down or is robbed, the backup is likely gone along with the computer.Curious, is there a reason why this is better than using Time Machine?
Too funny, just saw this over on POTN forumsPriorities...
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One at work. One at home is what I do. And as my late 2018 Mac mini just died looks like I’ll be needing them!A local backup like TM is good because it's (usually) faster than a backup over the Internet, and its usually easier to restore data - either a file or two, or a complete system. But due to it's close proximity, it's vulnerable to some of the same risks your Mac is, like physical damage or theft, i.e. if your house floods or burns down or is robbed, the backup is likely gone along with the computer.
A remote backup is safe from the proximity based threats, but is generally going to be slower, and usually quite a bit harder to recover from (and essentially impossible to "reinstall from backup" the way TM can).
The solution to solving both sets of problems, is to have two (or more) backups: a local TM backup, and a remote/offsite backup. Technically if you often travel to another location (i.e. work) you could do rotating TM backups and take one disk with you and leave it at work so you always have one at home and one at work.
Personally, I have a local TM backup onto a JBOD SPAN (5x 3TB disks acting as one big one), and a Backblaze subscription.