jeffr at odeon.net wrote:
> 
> Then you're pretty much stuck.  You could spend a lot (more than I want to
> figure out) on a tape solution, or you could spend a lot (about $1200 for
> that much data using 9.4 gig disks, plus a drive) on some sort of dvd-r
> solution each time you do a backup, our you could make another machine
> (for about $2000) with a really big raid 5 (400 gigs - 6 maxtor 80 gig
> drives and an Escalade 6800) which really only gives you an extra layer of
> redundancy, a power problem (you do have a UPS? - not that a UPS will
> solve all power problems - yet another expense)  could fry all of your
> systems, loosing all of your data.
> 
> No matter how you look at it, you'd have to spend a lot to back up that
> much data.
> 
> Any word on new techlogies that would make backing up really large amounts
> of data fast and cheap?  New types of optical storage maybe?
> 
> Jeff
> 
I'm guessing that ultimately we will be backing up to the internet - essentially
that will mean that you can pay only for the backup media and the shared costs
of the backup infrastructure.

I guess I would feel more secure than I do now if I could encrypt my data and
then hand it off to someone who would store it on widely separated backup farms
(USA, Europe, Australia?).

If I were going to do it, I would backup the data for free, and then charge 
bonzo bucks when someone needed their data back... MooHaaaHaaaHaaa

Kent