Backup

Many many years ago, probably about eight, I lost a bunch of data due to a hard disk failure. My backup strategy wasn’t that comprehensive then and so even though I didn’t lose everything, I lost enough to learn the hard lesson! Ever since then I’ve always been paranoid about data backup.

The first backup system I used was a Travan tape drive that stores about 256MB of data. Not much storage in today terms and very slow but it was very adequate back then. But as hard drive capacity grew along with digital media content, I soon upgraded to the ADR tape drive that stored about 1GB of data natively. That lasted me for awhile until I got my first iPod and my MP3/AAC collection skyrocket!

For a long while, probably about an year, I was doing selective backups to try to cramp only the most important data onto two ADR 2GB tapes. Backup speed wasn’t that back either using FireWire but then the tape drive failed and I was left with no backup at all. That made me very uneasy and led to my shift of strategy from tape to disk backup and I purchased a 80GB hard disk from LaCie. I used (and still use) the excellent Carbon Copy Cloner to clone my entire PowerBook drive to one of the 45GB partition, leaving the rest of 35GB for Leah’s PowerBook’s backup.

This worked perfectly until last night when I performed the bi-weekly backup and I hit the partition size limit. My disk has finally passed 45GB and the backup failed. I ended up deleting a bunch of very old data and apps that I’ll never used to push the disk down to just below 43GB. After that I was able to backup for the time being but as soon as I add any new files such as photos or music in the future I will easily trip over the limit.

So disk shopping tonight and the speed of hard disk storage capacity growth means that I can get double the size with the same money. The smallest LaCie drive of the same range as my existing one is 160GB for the same price and with tripe interfaces (FW400, FW800, and USB2.0)! My existing two years old 80GB disk only has FW400, for comparison. This 160GB drive should give me plenty of head room to grow even if I take a lot of photos.

Another backup item that I’ve been meaning to purchase for over an year is a DVD writer. One of the major missing component in my backup strategy is off-site backup. It is great that I clone my drive to another disk but if my apartment goes up in flame tomorrow everything will still be lost. Unless for some freak reason I have my laptop with me and not in the apartment!

A dual-layer DVD writer will have enough capacity to backup all of my critical data (documents, photos, music, etc.) and portable enough for me to take the disks off-site. But then the problem becomes where would I store these DVDs? I don’t have a safety deposit box and I am not going to open up just so I can put some DVDs in it. I guess I can also store actual legal documents there too but dropping off DVDs to a safety deposit box can be a chore. Another option is to mail the DVDs to a relative out of state. Yeah, as if I am going to mail DVDs to my parents in the U.K. every month. Filling out customs export declaration form for each mailing probably take longer than putting DVDs in safe deposit box! Not to mention the postages.

So now I am stuck with the off-site location problem. I am definitely going to get both the larger hard drive and DVD writer soon but until I find an off-site location to store the DVDs, I am no safer than I am now.

(Of course if someone has a DLT drive and a few tapes to donate, I am more than happy to take them off your hand! I’ll even do the safety deposit box thing, how’s that?!)

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Memory

Despite my wish to order the new MacBook Pro, I know I will be saving up for the second generation model. Hopefully it would have the 64bit CPU and perhaps even virtualisation! But until then I have to make do with developing ecto on my Compaq Windows laptop. However, ever since I’ve migrated to Visual Studio 2005 it has been hitting the memory limit which was only 768MB. So a lot of disk swapping and waiting which did no good when I am in a coding session and in the ‘zone’, so to speak.

Therefore, I took the plunge last week and ordered a stick of 1GB memory from Memory Ten and it arrived today. After installing it, which took all of five minutes, bootup, launched VS2005, loaded the project, etc. I immediately saw that peak memory utilisation was just over 1GB. Comfortably under the 1.5GB total. Now no more disk swapping and VS2005 is actually very usable and enjoyable 😉 Eventually I think I’ll have to replace the other 512MB stick with a 1GB also to push the memory to the max. 2GB, but that will be in the future.

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FUD on MacBook Pro price

So The Register has another FUD headline for the new MacBook Pro, "Intel Macs stay at non-Intel prices".

Yes, $2500 for the 1.83GHz version is expensive but is it really?

Look! The Acer’s TravelMate 8200 has similar spec and the same price!

Ideal-Lume

Since my interest in home cinema started many years ago I knew ambient lighting makes a difference in picture quality. But many factors prevent me to setup good ambient lighting so when I first heard about Ideal-Lume from CinemaQuest Inc. in the Christmas edition of Home Theater magazine, I was very interested.

After a Ideal-Lume lamp wasn’t delivered by Santa, I ordered one last week and it arrived today. The lamp is of high quality, higher than my expectation, and the installation (photos of the installation on Flickr) was very straightforward. The lamp comes with a rotating filter that let me set the amount of light output. After making sure the TV is calibrated as well as I can with Digital Video Essentials, I installed the lamp and used the DVE’s ambient light test pattern to setup the lamp.

Does the lamp make a difference in picture quality? Yes but not as much as some people make out to be. I definitely can feel less eye strain with the lamp on and the lower contrast between the background and the TV bring out more picture details. But unless you know what to look for, the difference is not big.

So for around $50 (including shipping) it is a fairly affordable way to improve the HDTV picture quality while at the same time making your living room look cool.

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Surprise!

I turned 30 last Thursday and Leah had thrown me a surprise party after work. Actually it wasn’t a surprise party since she told me about it the day before but she had been organising it for over two weeks, with amazingly long email trails. So throughout Thursday in the office I have to pretend I didn’t know there was a celebration after work. At around 6:30PM, my boss tried to delay me by asking me to talk to him about some personnel issues, while everyone left the office. Then he asked me to go and have a quick drinks with his wife before Leah and I (allegedly) went to dinner.

Of course everyone were in the pub when we arrived and I had to pretend to be surprised! Leah bought a delicious chocolate cake from Dean & Deluca which everyone devoured in the middle of a packed pub. Beer and cake, great combo! The people at work bought me a $50 iTunes Music Store gift card which I’ve already spent some of it this evening. They were trying to get me a electric butter warmer as a joke (or may be not) but unfortunately it is not sold in the US. After a few drinks some of us went to grab some dinner and I was treated with a tiramisu and candle at the end. So I had two birthday cakes! Woo hoo!

Though not really surprised, it was great to spend my birthday differently this year. Most years Leah and I would have a nice dinner with a few friends and that’s about it. It was a shame that only people I work with turned up in the pub. Other friends didn’t managed to join us due to work commitment or whatever.

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