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https://www.battleforlibraries.com/

#DigitalRightsForLibraries

  • 3 Posts
  • 62 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • OP asks about HDD technology, and somehow you found a way to ignore the main ask of their question, AND offer a response including a discussion about a hypothetical home renovation.

    “I see you want to know X, but I know about construction, so how about Z or Q? Eh?”

    Bravo.

    OP, WD Red NAS drives are usually 5400 with low cache and go at least up to 10TB. Might have to buy soon, as I don’t see much new stock.


  • Well as long as you’re aware of the risk and prepared for it, its not so bad to run in a volatile way like that. I ran my TN box for almost a decade on the same USB boot before I finally caved and picked up three Intel enterprise SSD for the job, with one as a cold spare. Nothing in the vox was critical or would be missed for more than a few beers of crying.


  • Thats is a very budget-friendly choice for UnRAID to accept varying drive sizes. As a backup destination, especially a cold backup, the RAM requirements of ZFS should be less impactful. I had lots of use from my TrueNAS box with 16GB, and my dedicated cold backup build is just 8GB on 5x1TB WD Blue (gasp!) HDDs. I always wanted to try other NAS platforms, but I’m away from all my tech for a few years.



  • Yes! I imported 23k media files into a new platform, and the takeout process was such a pain. My destination was built to handle the zipped or unzipped media, but occasionally issues cropped up,like when files spanned archives but the json was on the previous one. That resulted in orphaned files with upload dates instead of date taken.

    Ultimately, I think I had the best experience extracting all 123GB and uploading the albums/folders that way.

    Would have been SO much easier with an API that allowed cloud to cloud.






  • When I was in college, one of my instructors used these “clickers” that cost students $40 per semester to rent. They used radio to allow submitting realtime quiz answers during class.

    iClicker.

    F#$* those things.

    Faculty at the two higher eds I worked as staff at hated the cost of books and student materials too, and tried their best to keep them down. Most of them. Publishers like Pearson and Cengage started doing things like discounting teacher’s editions and/or including curriculum (slide decks, all level of evaluatons and more) in exchange for becoming the learning portal and getting their hands on that sweet, sweet PII and marketable data, not to mention the yearly rolling editions of their student texts with single-use portal key codes.

    This free market correction sure is taking its time…





  • No warranty covers the product with ITs serial number most of the time.

    Not sure what you mean.

    WD RMA seems to require proof of purchase and serial number.

    Perhaps going outside of these “normal” channels for RMA might get you around these requirements, but it seems unlikely they’d accept RMA for any drive without proof of purchase. Maybe in some cases, but in suspect those would be the exception, not the rule.

    That said, who is to say how long a drive sat on a stock shelf before initial sale? An unregistered drive could be secondhand, or just wasn’t sold until recently.

    I simply meant that I wouldn’t assume a used drive includes a manufacturer warranty. I’d work with the reseller to replace the drive, not the manufacturer.