If you have sensitive [or embarrassing] data, just do not store it on the cloud. Period. Do not trust Encryption. Do not trust what the cloud storage companies may claim. The terms may change on ce it is too late to remove your files.
I am implementing OpenSSO in my office, and we use the SUN Directory Server (instead of OpenDS). They seem to work very well. Integration with AD (if you really need it) is easy to do. Both OpenSSO and OpenDS are available at no cost. You only pay for the support, and the publicly available knowledge base is usually good enough.
Re:It's quite simple, but expensive.
on
Portable Storage?
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· Score: 1
I have a 20G Lacie drive, and although it's much smaller than one TB, it's also much less exensive. It carries everything I want to, and is very good, both under Linux and Windows. Just stay away from NTFS, or Linux partitions if you want cross-OS disk. I use FAT32 and it works like a charm.
I use @Home in Ottawa for over three years. I'm inthe west enc, and I was always impressed by the speed. Although we don't get 8mbps, I can get 2mbps downstream, when ftp'ing to my Linux server. I know that the east end used to have some speed problems, but I will always prefer @home cable modem instead of ADSL. This PPPoE thing is just not for Linux.
If you have sensitive [or embarrassing] data, just do not store it on the cloud. Period. Do not trust Encryption. Do not trust what the cloud storage companies may claim. The terms may change on ce it is too late to remove your files.
I am implementing OpenSSO in my office, and we use the SUN Directory Server (instead of OpenDS). They seem to work very well. Integration with AD (if you really need it) is easy to do. Both OpenSSO and OpenDS are available at no cost. You only pay for the support, and the publicly available knowledge base is usually good enough.
I have a 20G Lacie drive, and although it's much smaller than one TB, it's also much less exensive. It carries everything I want to, and is very good, both under Linux and Windows. Just stay away from NTFS, or Linux partitions if you want cross-OS disk. I use FAT32 and it works like a charm.
I use @Home in Ottawa for over three years. I'm inthe west enc, and I was always impressed by the speed. Although we don't get 8mbps, I can get 2mbps downstream, when ftp'ing to my Linux server. I know that the east end used to have some speed problems, but I will always prefer @home cable modem instead of ADSL. This PPPoE thing is just not for Linux.