What's the most redpilled methoid of backuping?

what's the most redpilled methoid of backuping?
usb hdds? ssds? local server? hot swap drive bays? cloud?

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Cloud and/or other HDDs.

NAS

HDD for short-term storage of varible data.
Tape for long-term storage.

Tarsnap

Burning DVDs

Optical media, tape

this, and HDD

magnetic tape

tape tape tape tape tape tape

G drive with no encryption

>sweating through gloves

321 strategy bro. Three backups, two forms of media, 1 off-site. Best bet is two separate redundant disk arrays + cloud.

stone or ceramic tablets

Tattooing the prime factorization of the total data in your dachshund.

'pill me on M-DISC for long term storage

print out the binary representation of every bit on the drive.

Save it as a mp3 file inside Yoko Ono's head. She is very handy, because he is reciting your data everywhere she goes.

>backuping
not backing up

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raid 5 + 1 with hotswwap drives and a ssd as cache.

encrypted restic into amazon s3

local nas with snapraid and weekly sync
raid is not a backup solution

It is if you're not poor.

By realizing you data is not that important.

What is a raid then?

A RAID only protects you in case of a drive failure, I wouldn't call it a backup. In case of a power surge or a fire, for example, the RAID wouldn't be that useful.

there are other implementations past raid that matter, a fire will take your tape drives too, the only real thing to do is to store tape drives in offsite or move to the cloud, one of which is more expensive than raid and the other is really fucking stupid. raid 5+1 in nas/server is a great solution to "fear of loss of data".

It's actually syncthing + scheduled cloud backups

>not considering the patrician's choice that is tape drives.
cinema5d.com/tape-storage-lto-generation-7-where-is-archive-technology-going/

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if you have to carry it through hell:
multiPAR3'd data in a single root directory (set as the base directory) on an M-disc stored inside of a pelican case with moisture absorbing packets on the inside, if you care about security maybe add a crazy EVVA MCS padlock to it

there's probably other parameters you could further add here

what happens if you accidentally delete or corrupt something? then it's wiped from your entire raid array. it's not a backup, it's redundancy.

RAID is redundancy and lets you keep a system online 24/7 when a drive fails. What it doesn't do is prevent user error like deletion/overwriting/virus.

That being said, I'm a retard who had an average uptime of 35 days each session over 4 years with a single SSD and HDD. I have gone through a few OS hopping, repartitioning (even had OS on HDD before having an SSD), holding 1.5 TiB on the HDD without data loss.
My question for Jow Forums right now is what is the common recommendation of program for simple daily backup of full drives? If a drive fails I can just reboot and use the other, losing up to a day of changes. I don't do the 24/7 shit anymore and I don't mind downtime. I have a pair of SSD and HDD on order.
I figure the backup drives will last longer if they run once every 2 days, vs RAID 1 running all the time, and remain unpowered when not in use (can I do that or will the BIOS technically spin up the HDD every time you turn on the PC?). I'm not interested in offsite backup.
I'm a complete newfag when it comes to this, help pls.
Also can drive cloning detect differences and not literally rewrite everything from scratch?

Local NAS is good enough for all your garbage hoarding data.

Anything you believe is genuinely important gets encrypted and backed up daily to at least two clouds with their servers on different continents.

For Windows I use Syncback. But since you're an OS hopper I assume you're using Loonix.

Creating a culture focused around collecting, storing and retelling the data you want to preserve.

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I'm by no means criticizing the use of RAIDs, just stating that it is not a backup method. I'd use RAID 1 on a NAS, too.

>a fire will take your tape drives too
It depends. It is fairly easy to protect your storage from a fire if you keep it on a separate drive.

I don't hop anymore. I'm settled with Windows LTSC.

2x HP N40L's both run Freenas and ecc ram. Both keep the same data. one is kept shutdown until data sync time which is once a year. data snapshots are ran at scheduled times on the primary n40l so if data does get deleted by accident it can be recovered.

1 Zyzel nas with 2tb x 4 in raid 5. Contains core data in backup image format. shutdown

1 server 2012 r2 box that uses refs on the volume. acts as media server and client pc backup dump.

everything is ran from ups

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post more gropers

punchcards, then cut each punchcard into 24x36 jigsaw puzzle pieces for maximum encryption

I'll be able to enjoy my ripped/downloaded movies and music for years to come without fear of nasty bitrot or other shit creeping into it. Yes I could always re-rip/re-download but lets face it 4TB+ would take a hell of a long time to redo.

The same applies to my porn stash, at almost 5TB would be painful to lose it all. Some of it is kinda hard to get now, least without it being all compressed and low res shit like you see on porn streaming sites.

Be able to enjoy all of it in 15 yrs time with each bit a perfect copy as it is now.

icloud

Screenshots

>“in”

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