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#11
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Paul Ratcliffe wrote:
This gives me the same uneasy feeling as the trendy concept of "cloud computing", which despite the enthusiastic support it receives from some quarters (notably those selling it) actually amounts to me keeping all my stuff on somebody else's computer, with no guarantees about snip whether I will always have access to it myself. If you use Dropbox you will. And if you set up Skydrive in a certain way you will, too. Dropbox keeps a full local copy of your data on each computer. While you are connected to the Dropbox server it also synchronises your data with the cloud version. Although we talk of Dropbox as an online storage cloud application, it's better to think of it as an online cloud synchronisation service. It's brilliant. I can work on my data on my tablet or my desktop, and they are silently synchronised. If I'm on my laptop and can't connect to the internet, it doesn't matter. I work on the local copy, save the changes locally, and the next time my laptop can see the internet, the local files are synced with the online ones. When I get home and switch on my desktop, it's local files get updated, too. Thus even if Dropbox went bankrupt, you'd still have a copy of the data on every computer which had been connected to that account. It's the same with SkyDrive, so long as you tell it to make every file and folder available "offline". -- SteveT |
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#12
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On Fri, 10 Jan 2014 06:00:30 -0600, "Steve Thackery"
wrote: If you use Dropbox you will... +1 Dropbox is excellent. -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. By Loch Long, twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
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#13
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In message , Johny B Good
writes On Fri, 10 Jan 2014 02:43:17 -0000, Yellow wrote: In article , says... On Thu, 09 Jan 2014 23:11:08 +0000, Roderick Stewart wrote: I tried using torrents, but abandoned the process when I realised it involved leaving my computer on all the time, effectively making part of it available to all and sundry. This gives me the same uneasy feeling as the trendy concept of "cloud computing", which despite the enthusiastic support it receives from some quarters (notably those selling it) actually amounts to me keeping all my stuff on somebody else's computer, with no guarantees about who will have access to it or what they will do with it or whether I will always have access to it myself. For once we are entirely in agreement... We all know what happens to clouds - they either vapourise without warning, or they **** all over you. Perhaps you have just been unlucky as I have always found torrents a useful resource, whether I am using the technology to download an update or a file for my course (as interestingly lots of colleges and universities use torrents) or trying to locate a tv show I have missed for some reason. I think it's about practice, it's about how bothered you about what you are trying to find and it's about how you feel about being a reciprocal part of a community that is prepared to use their bandwidth and computer time to make information available to you pretty much on demand. If you're simply not that bothered and have fundamental concerns about the technology then you will never become proficient - law of diminishing returns? And as for leaving a computer on - it's what you have to do when it is being used and it is a bit like complaining that you have to leave a light on in order to see to read. And you can always set the software to close your computer down as soon as the files have been completed. For those of us running NAS4Free or FreeNAS boxes on a 24/7 basis (regardless of whether or not HDD spin down power saving is used), it's no bother to leave the torrenting to the "Transmission" torrent client service. There's no need to leave a desktop machine running for the sake of gathering torrent sources. It's also worth pointing out that a lot of commercial ready made NAS boxes also include a torrent client service function (it's such a mind numbingly obvious feature to include into a box that would normally be running 24/7 on the LAN that there can be very few NAS boxes _without_ such a service). Regarding the quality of the torrent, a decent torrent client will allow you to select which files in a multifile collection (say a TV series of episodes) to collect and which ones to pause. You can then speed up the aquisition of a selected episode or three out of maybe a larger collection of 6 or 12 or more so you can check the quality out to see whether it's worth hanging on in with the rest of the torrent or to look elsewhere for a better one. This selectivity feature can be a handy way of acquiring a missing episode or two by using a monster compendium as a source without having to download the whole compendium. You can also set the torrent client to shut down the PC when the file/s are downloaded. -- Ian |
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#14
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On Fri, 10 Jan 2014 06:00:30 -0600, "Steve Thackery"
wrote: Dropbox keeps a full local copy of your data on each computer. While you are connected to the Dropbox server it also synchronises your data with the cloud version. Although we talk of Dropbox as an online storage cloud application, it's better to think of it as an online cloud synchronisation service. It's brilliant. I can work on my data on my tablet or my desktop, and they are silently synchronised. If I'm on my laptop and can't connect to the internet, it doesn't matter. I work on the local copy, save the changes locally, and the next time my laptop can see the internet, the local files are synced with the online ones. When I get home and switch on my desktop, it's local files get updated, too. Thus even if Dropbox went bankrupt, you'd still have a copy of the data on every computer which had been connected to that account. And who else would have access to the copies of all your files on the (formerly) Dropbox servers? What happens to bankrupt equipment? Rod. |
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#15
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Roderick Stewart wrote:
And who else would have access to the copies of all your files on the (formerly) Dropbox servers? What happens to bankrupt equipment? I didn't disagree that part of the argument, because I agree with it!! So, I never put my most confidential documents on there. In fact there are very few - almost everything of mine would be of little interest to anyone else. It's a judgement call, obviously. For me, I find it a great facility, but I only use it for documents that are currently "live" and I frequently work on from home, university, a friend's house, etc. And I don't put anything that would be embarrassing or confidential on there. Anybody who uses cloud storage as their sole backup would be nuts, obviously. -- SteveT |
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#16
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#17
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#18
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"Paul Ratcliffe" wrote in message ... On Thu, 09 Jan 2014 23:11:08 +0000, Roderick Stewart wrote: I tried using torrents, but abandoned the process when I realised it involved leaving my computer on all the time, effectively making part of it available to all and sundry. This gives me the same uneasy feeling as the trendy concept of "cloud computing", which despite the enthusiastic support it receives from some quarters (notably those selling it) actually amounts to me keeping all my stuff on somebody else's computer, with no guarantees about who will have access to it or what they will do with it or whether I will always have access to it myself. For once we are entirely in agreement... We all know what happens to clouds - they either vapourise without warning, or they **** all over you. and the people who run "clouds" can't understand why corporates wont use them tim |
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#19
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"Steve Thackery" wrote in message ... Roderick Stewart wrote: And who else would have access to the copies of all your files on the (formerly) Dropbox servers? What happens to bankrupt equipment? I didn't disagree that part of the argument, because I agree with it!! So, I never put my most confidential documents on there. In fact there are very few - almost everything of mine would be of little interest to anyone else. It's a judgement call, obviously. For me, I find it a great facility, but I only use it for documents that are currently "live" and I frequently work on from home, university, a friend's house, etc. And I don't put anything that would be embarrassing or confidential on there. Anybody who uses cloud storage as their sole backup would be nuts, obviously. But that's what they are selling Tim |
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#20
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On Fri, 10 Jan 2014 19:29:32 -0000, Yellow wrote:
I didn't use the system long enough to become unlucky, just long enough for me to realise it was a bad idea. Aren't we always being warned about allowing others access to our computers, No. and that we should take steps to prevent it? Again - no. And if you did block access you would no longer find the internet of any use to you because it simply would not work. So what do firewalls and antivirus software do then, if not block access to things on my computer whilst allowing selected access to the outside world? And isn't it generally considered sensible to use them? But then perhaps you think the very post you are looking at now arrived on your machine without interaction between your computer and the outside world. I think it arrived here because my computer made a request to a server, not the other way round. I realise my understanding of how torrents work is incomplete, but I think I have grasped the essentials, and one feature that did cach my attention is that it's a two-way arrangement. If I want to download a file, it arrives piecemeal from lots of other people's computers which have to be requested to provide the pieces. Likewise, my computer has to make available a designated part of its file system for others to make similar requests to me. That's the bit that concerns me. It may be that the torrent system is only supposed to allow access to certain designated areas, but they are effectively offered to the entire world, so if there is any weakness that could allow someone access to anything beyond the intended boundaries, it would only be a matter of time before somebody found it. More than a decade after Windows XP was written, Microsoft, the very people who wrote it, are still occasionally finding and correcting security weaknesses that nobody spotted before, because they could allow unintended access to user data, and that's in software that doesn't explicitly offer part of itself to the world. Being frightened of something that you do not understand is simply being frightened of something because you do not understand it. Being "frightened" of something isn't the same as simply deciding not to use it because I don't think it has anything to offer me that would outweigh the perceived risk. It's a considered choice, not fear. I'm not "frightened" of my computer being completely trashed, because I know I can rebuild it, but I'd rather not suffer the nuisance. Rod. |
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