![]() We try to keep backups for at least a month, although longer would probably be ideal, since lost or corrupted files aren’t always obvious right away. For our main desktops we’ve installed large hard drives (often the old ones from our NAS units as we upgrade them to larger drives) where we store a similar set of backups for redundancy. These are stored on our primary Synology NAS. For the system drives on our Windows computers, we run Easeus Todo Backup with Full backups at least once a week, and incrementals every morning. David Cardinalįor our home-based business, we use parallel backup strategies for our systems and data. Our next upgrade, as soon as we can afford it, is to move the sample and project drives entirely to SSDs and Thunderbolt connections, though it’s going to be a while before we can swing that. Over the years, I’ve reorganized our recording and post-production studio several times, as we’ve added and subtracted PCs and devices. Finally, we’ve got several extra 1TB and 2TB USB drives that we use for occasional large backups, to ensure if anything catastrophic happens we’ve always got those to fall back on - though at this point, I’m thinking of trying one of David Cardinal’s NAS setups the more photos we take. The cloud also handles our email and working photo stashes for my mirrorless camera photos, Apple’s iCloud and Google Photos both cover it, and we pay for both to have the original RAW files stored in the accounts. For example, she works in our studio upstairs and sends me recorded tracks, I do a rough mix over the weekend, she takes it back and adds more instruments and comps all the background vocals, I then mix that further upstairs in the main acoustically treated room instead of downstairs…For this kind of thing we’re relying on shared local drives and Logic Pro X’s built-in sharing capabilities, but we may amp this up further the more we do this.įor our other machines - a quad-core i7 (Devil’s Canyon) PC in my office, a 15-inch 2017 MacBook Pro I also use for work, and a 13-inch 2016 MacBook Air she uses - we’ve got most of the data on these in a Google Drive cloud and Apple’s iCloud, which also loops in our iOS and Android devices. Increasingly, we’re working on music projects together on separate machines.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |