editorials discussion board

 
Books & Buyer's Guides

Information Hubs



Other Product Information

 

Site Supporters

Apple iPhone Prices At ...
Apple Store
Canada Apple Store
Cingular Wireless
iPhone InfoZone

Going Shopping?

Using the links above supports MacReviewZone!


send this page

Send to a friend



News Feed
Feed Information

Mailing list ... List information.


Latest Discussion Threads

MacReviewZone Gift Shop

MacStorage - Backup, Backup, Backup!

 by Laser Quasar Absolutely
Future of the Mac(That's not really my real name ... but does it really matter? I mean, really?)  

THEY SAY THAT IN COMPUTER-LAND THERE ARE ONLY TWO KINDS OF FOOLS: THOSE WHO have LOST DATA, AND THOSE WHO will  LOSE DATA.

Backup, backup, backup! Isn't that the refrain we incessantly hear from all sides? But how many of us do?
Tell the truth, even I lost data once. The hard disk in my Mac failed after three months of use. Apple's servicemen replaced it under warranty, of course, stalwart fellows that they are; but my data was gone, gone, gone! I had to buy a large bucket just to hold my tears. (I still have them bottled up in my basement, as proof that it really did happen, and as a lesson to the foolish.) I then splurged, and got myself a Jaz drive with two cartridges.
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that one way Apple could win over everyone, including large numbers from the Wintel crowd, is to make sure Apple users will never, ever, lose data.
And it could be done fairly cheaply, too!
With the iMac, Apple is already moving towards making all its machines Internet savvy. What if Apple set up a whole basement full of storage devices connected to the Internet, and as an integral part of the price of a Mac -- or at most for a few dollars per year -- allowed any Mac user to copy all their data to the Storage Centre?
(Of course I use the term "whole basement full" figuratively. These Storage Centres could be widely distributed around the globe -- perhaps at every major Apple retailer's stores. Or perhaps Apple could work out an agreement with universities and public libraries to provide such a service, something which might provide a few extra bucks to the latter too. But these are just details.)
Let's take a look at the economics of the scheme. At today's prices, large hard-disk-based storage devices cost around $25 per GB, retail. (Want proof? A 10.2 GB IDE Quantum Fireball was advertised in a recent issue of eMedia Weekly for $259.00 -- and though SCSI hard disks are considerably more expensive, since you'd be backing up over the Internet anyway, IDE will do just fine.) And tape backup devices -- also a distinct possibility -- cost even less: as low as $13 per GB for the really big ones. DVD-RAM is yet another possibility, with prices not much higher than you'd pay at McDonald's for a couple of  Happy Meals.
Manufacturing prices being about half as much as retail, it would cost Apple no more than $12.99, tops, to back up a GB of your data, and keep it safe pretty much for the rest of your life. (And in case you didn't notice, $12.99 is just 1 per cent the original retail price of an iMac!)
You could never compete with those prices. Twelve-ninety-nine takes care of one whole gigabyte of data, mind you, and that too without compression. (How much data do you generate in a year, anyway?) With compression, the system could back up maybe twice that much -- but at these prices, who needs compression? 
And at the rate storage prices are falling -- which happens to be even faster than CPU prices, and that's saying a lot -- in ten year's time, hey, who knows? Maybe the cost to Apple for storing your GB-worth of data may fall to just a buck or two! At those prices they could even afford to give away the service for free, just to generate good will.
And as my technical expert, John Christie -- who originally gave me the idea -- puts it so very correctly,
"With centralized data you would never move very large amounts more than once. I envision that you buy one very large networked, secure, and redundant storage device. You can access it from anywhere and you never need anything like removable media. Even multimedia users with large files (200 MB or so) could have small 'way station' storage devices in their computers that synchronized in the background during idle CPU time. The bandwidth for this is already available, though not in common use. In almost every endeavour the time spent by the user is mostly in manipulation. This means that the actual data moving could be done at another time."
In other words, why bother backing up, when it's all gonna be done for you, maybe every night when you're sleeping? (The software for compressing files, connecting to the Storage Centre, and regularly backing everything up during off-hours could all be integrated into the MacOS, of course.)
And it's not just backup you'd get. All your data would be available to you from anywhere and everywhere; so if you fly from New York to LA to give a presentation, you wouldn't have to carry all your data with you. Forgot your laptop? Not to worry! Just use a Mac -- any Mac -- when you get there! (Just make sure your password is a real long and crazy one, with lots of weird characters. Of course, if you're really paranoid, you can even encrypt your data.)
Not only does the system take care of the backup, it takes care of the missing floppy in the new Macs too! (Just kidding.) (But then again, doesn't it?)
Come to that, Apple could agree to sell you even more storage as and when you need it. So as Internet speeds get faster and faster (I already have ADSL, and my wife has had ISDN for over a year now), you need not buy that humongous multi-GB hard disk with your PowerBook -- just buy one that's large enough to hold your apps, plus maybe a little bit more for temporary storage of data. The rest of your stuff can be safe and sound at Cupertino! (Or wherever.)
Of course you eagle-eyed readers will have immediately grasped the fact that Redmond could do the same thing for its customers.  And you would be entirely right. (Well, not quite: it wouldn't work for programs, since Win apps need to have files located just so on the hard drive, and if their locations are messed up, the programs won't work! But for pure data, Redmond could do it.)

So isn't that the very best reason of all for Apple to be doing it first? We don't want people saying "Macs just copy PCs", do we now.


... (not his real name -- but you figured that out already, right?) ... calls himself a "Thinker", especially about the future. He thinks that's where he'll be spending the rest of his life (but who's he kidding, eh?  Doesn't he realize it's always going to be now?)

Most people say to him "You can't be serious" -- and they're right, he can't. (But then, who can be serious about the future, seeing as how anything can happen in it, and usually does ... er, will?)

His best book -- indeed his only book -- is entitled The Seventh Generation, and its shareware version in Adobe Acrobat format is available for download from his alter-ego's web site (under construction right now) at http://cpu2308.adsl.bellglobal.com. It's all about the next 150 years or so, and where technology might take us in that amount of time. (Just $5.00 -- cheap! And well worth it, though he says so himself). Check it out.

And send him e-mail: he loves feedback!

  Have a comment on this article? Head the MacReviewZone Community Bulletin Board and share it with your fellow Mac users!

Future of the Mac Column Index

| Top of page | Mail this page to a friend |

Recent Additions

Dashboard Icon Check out our new dashboard widget tracking site updates and providing quick access to key areas of MacSpeedZone and MacReviewZone!

Reader Specials

firefox Firefox Search Plugins - search this site and others from within Firefox!

HandHelditems.com - Personalize your iPod with us. Shop hundreds of unique iPod accessories and save up to 80%.

Apple Store Apple Store - The size of a pack of gum, iPod shuffle weighs less than a car key. Which means there's nowhere your skip-free iPod shuffle can"t go. Click Here


Home Reviews Opinions & Articles Buyer's Guides MacSpeedZone

Copyright 1996-2007 by Cider Press Publishing LLC all rights reserved. MacReviewZone is not authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Apple Computer. Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, iPod, iBook, iMac, eMac, and PowerBook are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. Additional company and product names may be trademarks or registered trademarks and are hereby acknowledged.