something that is missed in all of this is field of vision human eye vision is wider then it is tall the amount of effort on the viewers part to move the focal point of your vision is less side to side then up and down ( a large angle change will regardless of orientation will require some pan and scan ). This is why media has been moving this direction over the years. Maximum use of para central vision and maximum use of peripheral vision. The best way to look at it is siting to close to a screen or getting a TV or screen that is to large. You work harder and the experience is not better.
As a connoisseur of odd screen resolutions 1600x1200 1920x1200 2560x1440 and now 3440x1440 I can hands down say wider is better at the correct viewing distance. I got 3840x2160 4k monitors to replace my 1920x1200s after holding out for years for a taller resolution and hated the screens not because of the height but because of the size to resolution 28 inch 4k is BS if you are over 12 years old. I upgraded to a 3440x1440 and its been the best viewing experience I can remember and the bigest screen upgrade I have seen since I went from a 1024x768 CRT to a 1600x1200 lcd. on laptops the wide screen was also the only thing that allows for larger screen sizes like 17 inches a 4,3 17 inch would be unbearable, and would never fit in a bag.
A lawyer cant getaway with that even the fire/flood destroyed everything wonâ(TM)t work most of the time. They are supposed to have copies off site its part of most bar requirements and most contracts most lawyers sell up the fact they do this.
I have been working as a it consultant for 11 years for small and medium business from the once a month update and ram install to the 32 hour a week full administrated network users. I have dent with all manner of backups tapes hard drives mirrored servers online services optical media etc. They all have their advantages and disadvantages.
For offsite backups for small clients I use online backups (moxypro) combined with monthly or yearly hard media backups. A set of archive DVDs (looking in to bluray for this) the online backup keeps them never more than a day out of date back up wise. The monthly or yearly backups for old files that they donâ(TM)t need to get to fast. Can be stashed a few places for redundancy one at home one in the office one in a safety deposit box one in your car etc all are encrypted .
For midsized or very large amounts of data online back ups are much too pricy all being around $1 a gig or so monthly a cycle of tapes or hard drive backups can be done but you run the risk of someone forgetting. Then you have to get a piece of quality backup software allot of hardware and there is administration that is required. Some customers like this I have back up to a mirrored folder on one of my servers I keep in a data center it works its costly and it takes a long time to get lost data back.
anyway my suggestion for online backup is moxypro its a small client reasonable pricing rarely down you can control how often it backs up how much bandwidth it uses it runs on 2k + and will email you if it has a problem or runs out of space. They also let you attach it to your own account but bill directly to the user so you can track manage upgrade etc but the bill goes to them.
As for the legal aspect of it for extra security for controlled info I set a batch to run an hour before the backup starts to encrypt it all.
something that is missed in all of this is field of vision human eye vision is wider then it is tall the amount of effort on the viewers part to move the focal point of your vision is less side to side then up and down ( a large angle change will regardless of orientation will require some pan and scan ). This is why media has been moving this direction over the years. Maximum use of para central vision and maximum use of peripheral vision. The best way to look at it is siting to close to a screen or getting a TV or screen that is to large. You work harder and the experience is not better. As a connoisseur of odd screen resolutions 1600x1200 1920x1200 2560x1440 and now 3440x1440 I can hands down say wider is better at the correct viewing distance. I got 3840x2160 4k monitors to replace my 1920x1200s after holding out for years for a taller resolution and hated the screens not because of the height but because of the size to resolution 28 inch 4k is BS if you are over 12 years old. I upgraded to a 3440x1440 and its been the best viewing experience I can remember and the bigest screen upgrade I have seen since I went from a 1024x768 CRT to a 1600x1200 lcd. on laptops the wide screen was also the only thing that allows for larger screen sizes like 17 inches a 4,3 17 inch would be unbearable, and would never fit in a bag.
A lawyer cant getaway with that even the fire/flood destroyed everything wonâ(TM)t work most of the time. They are supposed to have copies off site its part of most bar requirements and most contracts most lawyers sell up the fact they do this. I have been working as a it consultant for 11 years for small and medium business from the once a month update and ram install to the 32 hour a week full administrated network users. I have dent with all manner of backups tapes hard drives mirrored servers online services optical media etc. They all have their advantages and disadvantages. For offsite backups for small clients I use online backups (moxypro) combined with monthly or yearly hard media backups. A set of archive DVDs (looking in to bluray for this) the online backup keeps them never more than a day out of date back up wise. The monthly or yearly backups for old files that they donâ(TM)t need to get to fast. Can be stashed a few places for redundancy one at home one in the office one in a safety deposit box one in your car etc all are encrypted . For midsized or very large amounts of data online back ups are much too pricy all being around $1 a gig or so monthly a cycle of tapes or hard drive backups can be done but you run the risk of someone forgetting. Then you have to get a piece of quality backup software allot of hardware and there is administration that is required. Some customers like this I have back up to a mirrored folder on one of my servers I keep in a data center it works its costly and it takes a long time to get lost data back. anyway my suggestion for online backup is moxypro its a small client reasonable pricing rarely down you can control how often it backs up how much bandwidth it uses it runs on 2k + and will email you if it has a problem or runs out of space. They also let you attach it to your own account but bill directly to the user so you can track manage upgrade etc but the bill goes to them. As for the legal aspect of it for extra security for controlled info I set a batch to run an hour before the backup starts to encrypt it all.