What Are You Doing Right Now
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@quixoticgerber said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jaredbusch I do believe we're splitting hairs now, so forgive me for my "inadequate" terminology use. I will proceed to COPY my files to my USB sticks so as not to lose them when I basically annihilate my computer.
If you want to talk about splitting hairs I suggest you look at your boss
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@quixoticgerber said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jaredbusch I do believe we're splitting hairs now, so forgive me for my "inadequate" terminology use. I will proceed to COPY my files to my USB sticks so as not to lose them when I basically annihilate my computer.
Don't feel bad... @JaredBusch only acts like a big grump when he cares.
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@dafyre said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@quixoticgerber said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jaredbusch I do believe we're splitting hairs now, so forgive me for my "inadequate" terminology use. I will proceed to COPY my files to my USB sticks so as not to lose them when I basically annihilate my computer.
Don't feel bad... @JaredBusch only acts like a big grump when he cares.
I actually see him as grumpy cat sometimes. Just kidding Jared!
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@quixoticgerber said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jaredbusch I do believe we're splitting hairs now, so forgive me for my "inadequate" terminology use. I will proceed to COPY my files to my USB sticks so as not to lose them when I basically annihilate my computer.
Semantics are everything in IT. That little copy vs backup terminology is enough that I've seen six figure banking executives sweating because the SEC was going to shut down their banking operations because they were making copies, not backups. It's really important in how you think about the data and how you present it to others.
It might sound like a simple wording difference, but it implies that in your head you are thinking of it as protecting your data, rather than just shuffling it around. And he was mentioning it to make sure you were thinking of the data as remaining at risk.
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@scottalanmiller Fair enough. I can get that difference now. Especially in the current job where people lose their blessed minds over wording in email. Admittedly in my head, I wasn't thinking of it as protected, but as shuffled around so as not to lose it. So my mindset was fine, but the terminology was flawed.
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Having some wisdom beaten into me, and being astonished at the level of dumb that my brain can produce.
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@quixoticgerber said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller Fair enough. I can get that difference now. Especially in the current job where people lose their blessed minds over wording in email. Admittedly in my head, I wasn't thinking of it as protected, but as shuffled around so as not to lose it. So my mindset was fine, but the terminology was flawed.
Just good habits, Jared mentions it here because I've written papers on how backups become masters when the originals get deleted. It's a specific thing taught in IT because it's so easy to forget that something that was once a backup, stops being a backup and turns into an archive instead, when the original is removed. It's something that catches people regularly, so we try to catch it when it is said. Seen a lot of data lost because of that first hand, in huge Wall St. firms. Just because someone said backup, when it was an archive, and then the originals were deleted and the archives were eventually retired.
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@scottalanmiller Well I sure as hell didn’t say it because you were the paper
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@quixoticgerber that said, I'd consider using a backup tool at this stage, rather than going to USB. Assuming you have any kind of Internet connection at all, get that data somewhere that you can get it back from. Like BackBlaze, CrashPlan or whatever else people have mentioned. B2, Glacier, etc. So that you actually have it protected, if it is worth protecting.
Then when you have your Linux box up and running, you can sync it back or whatever and keep using it there, too. But also keep it protected down the road.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@quixoticgerber that said, I'd consider using a backup tool at this stage, rather than going to USB. Assuming you have any kind of Internet connection at all, get that data somewhere that you can get it back from. Like BackBlaze, CrashPlan or whatever else people have mentioned. B2, Glacier, etc. So that you actually have it protected, if it is worth protecting.
Then when you have your Linux box up and running, you can sync it back or whatever and keep using it there, too. But also keep it protected down the road.
Changing platforms ruins the initial back up anyway from those kind of tools most of the time. Unless you’re only backing up a specific directory structure but even then your directory structure changes when you move from windows to Linux
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@jaredbusch good to know, thank you!
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@quixoticgerber said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jaredbusch good to know, thank you!
That's why I mentioned something like DropBox. Can work really well for that. You just pop everything you want to keep into that and let it sync. Then let it sync back.
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@scottalanmiller OK, yeah. I'm sorry if I misled anyone. Just p***ing and moaning needlessly over saving my photos and music when it's literally a set-and-forget process when I pick the right tools. I should be backing these up all along anyway.
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@quixoticgerber said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller OK, yeah. I'm sorry if I misled anyone. Just p***ing and moaning needlessly over saving my photos and music when it's literally a set-and-forget process when I pick the right tools. I should be backing these up all along anyway.
For photos, if you have Amazon Prime, they have a free service for that. Flickr is great and has some free tier for that as well.
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In that case, you're "moving" the data (to USB stick), because you have the intention of it being the only copy, therefore not a backup.
I would make two copies of your original data on different media, so that you aren't left with a single copy when you format your drive. That way you will have a backup.
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At the IT road map conference in fort worth
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At the ring central breakout session currently
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@jmoore said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
At the ring central breakout session currently
We were just discussing ways to beat their pricing for tiny clients last night
They have basically nothing to offer a shop over ~12 users already.
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@scottalanmiller what did you come up with?
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Now talking with @BluGhost23 about him getting his radio license. Kind of feel like a radio ambassador.