On Sun, 17 Feb 2019 10:37:54 -0000 (UTC) Curt <cu...@free.fr> wrote: > On 2019-02-17, Celejar <cele...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On Fri, 15 Feb 2019 09:52:55 -0000 (UTC) > > Curt <cu...@free.fr> wrote: > > > >> On 2019-02-15, Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming <tdteoenm...@gmail.com> > >> wrote: > >> > > >> > Basically personal data. I don't intend to access the data in the > >> > Cloud often. Just want to park it permanently in the Cloud. Maybe I > >> > can access the Cloud from anywhere in the world? > >> > > >> > >> > >> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Glacier > > > > Depending on how often / how fast the storage will need to be accessed, > > C14 can be cheaper: > > > > https://www.online.net/en/c14#pricing > > Amazon also fills the enterprise-unlikely-to-fold-in-the-foreseeable- > future" reliability criterion. I'm uncertain about c14 in this regard > (though a "deep underground fallout shelter located in Paris, France. > Without known natural, technological, and military risks..." sounds > quite reassuring, especially if you're a French civil servant). > > One worrisome aspect is the "Sustainability Guarantee" (whatever that > might be) for a "Standard" service level is merely 3-6 years, which is > quite this side of forever.
Fair points, certainly, but note that Online.net is a major internet company, albeit not an Amazon: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_SAS > It also appears that once your data is uploaded to a "safe-deposit box" > (limited to 40TB in size) via the rsync, ftp, sftp, or scp protocols, it > is permanently archived. But you only have 7 days to effectuate that > upload. How many TBs of data the OP could transfer over his link in a > week remains to be evaluated, but it seems unarchiving an existing > archive to add more data, or creating a new one, are both operations > subject to a fee. Agreed. > BTW, what about these Canadians (histoire de couper la poire en deux, so > to speak)? > > https://www.sync.com/pricing/ > > Business Advanced > > For multiple users > $15per user, per month > billed annually > 2-user minimum > > All the secure file storage you need (up to 10 TB per user), with > advanced sharing, collaboration, admin controls and live support. > > That comes out to $75.00 a month for 50TB (five users). > Sounds pretty good from here. Looks interesting - do they support standard protocols, or is their proprietary client required? Celejar