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Ask Slashdot: Easiest Way To Consolidate Household Media?

First time accepted submitter Lordfly writes "The wife and I have started looking to buy a house. In the spirit of that, I've been giving away books, CDs, and DVDs to 'downsize' the pile of crap I'll have to lug around when we do find the right place. That got me thinking about digital files. I'm perfectly okay with giving up (most) books, CDs, and DVD cases. The only music I buy are MP3s anyway, and we stream most everything else if we wanted to watch a show or movie. That being said, I have a desktop, my wife has an old Macbook, we both have tablets, and I also have an Android smartphone. I'd like to set up something on an extra Windows box shoved in a closet that lets me dump every digital file we have (photos, music, ebooks, movies) and then doles it out as necessary to all of our devices. Unfortunately my best computer geek days are likely behind me (photography and cooking have consumed me since), so while I CAN schlep around a command line, I've lost most of my knowledge, so go easy on the 'just apt-get FubarPackageInstaller.gzip and rd -m Arglebargle' stuff. Something easy enough for my wife to use would be a major plus. So: What's the best way to make your own personal 'cloud'?"

12 of 272 comments (clear)

  1. An ultimately simple concept... by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...you just have a fileshare. Create two if you want to be fancy. One is read only and is a media horde and the other is a scratch and play area that everyone in the house can use.

    Use any tech you want. Use any OS you want.

    Just create two samba shares and have at it.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    1. Re:An ultimately simple concept... by CastrTroy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would probably just ignore RAID for a home backup solution. Just have a job run nightly ( or ever couple of hours) to copy off the files to a backup drive. Once in a while purge files off the backup that no longer exist on the first drive. For home purposes, it's probably not terribly important that every file is mirrored instantly, and the added cost and complexity of RAID probably isn't worth it for most people.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  2. Just buy a NAS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just buy a NAS box and start copying files. It's easier, less time consuming and less likely to break. Toms hardware has reviews. Get a decent one and it'll stream media to your digital devices without configuration. Suggest a static IP on your router if you have the inclination, but I've not gotten around to it. Similarly, suggest registering it with merge so you get software updates, but probably unnecessary. Other slashdot terms will give a lot more specific advice, but the best buy level NASs already have the compatibility you think you want froma windows box.

    1. Re:Just buy a NAS by rawket.scientist · · Score: 4, Informative

      This! I Asked Slashdot about cloud storage for our small office a while back, and we ended up getting a four-bay QNAP NAS. That's probably overkill for home use, but we've been completely satisfied, and I'm seriously considering a lighter-weight edition for personal use.

      --
      John Hancock wuz here.
  3. Router and HDD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Lots of routers are now coming with USB3 connections that let you mount an external hard disk. It's cheaper than a file server and faster than cloud storage. At a $200 price point for an external hard disk and router I think this is a solid bonus. In addition, most external hard disks will sleep after a few minutes when they aren't being used, which is a 'greener' option than a server. You can also have multiple computers adding media to the hard disk at the same time via network to aid in your archival efforts.

  4. owncloud? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    seems ready for what you ask ...
    http://owncloud.org/

    tom

  5. Legality? by TheLink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are you going to keep the receipts of purchase around? If not, how are you going to prove all your digital copies are legal? Particularly the ones from physical media that you no longer possess.

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    1. Re:Legality? by Nerdfest · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why should he have to? "Innocent until proven guilty" should still apply until the copyright mafias completely buy out the government.

    2. Re:Legality? by hab136 · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Innocent until proven guilty" and "reasonable doubt" is for criminal cases.

      "Preponderance of evidence" is the standard in civil cases (lawsuits), which basically means whichever story is more likely.

  6. Synology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I got another Synology DS212J this year. It has a lot of click-to-add packages like photo, audio, media shares. Works with Win/Mac/Lin/I/And (everything I have is Linux/Android).
    Great browser based setup/admin, built in RAID, Network Attached Storage. Best home NAS I have used.

    Here is their live demo page:
    http://www.synology.com/products/dsm_livedemo.php?lang=us

  7. Re:The OP needs a NAS with ZFS! by ottothecow · · Score: 4, Informative
    except you can't simply expand a ZFS system by adding more disks or swapping in larger HDDs into an existing array.

    For a home user who is probably going to grow the system (rather than just add new systems or depreciate and replace like a company might) this seems like a pretty key feature.

    Unraid is also pretty great about managing data and shares--makes it super easy for someone who doesn't want ot worry about it. A single parity disk and no striping means you can eat a single disk loss, and since the drives don't have to match, you can build it with a bunch of different brand drives from different systems which makes a multiple disk loss in a short time span less likely. Also, it fully supports spinning down the individual disks in an array that are not in use. Streaming a movie will only require a single disk to be spinning in a 5 drive array.

    And really...if you are not a typical /. nerd...you are not going to watch that video.

    --
    Bottles.