This is not exactly the technology you are looking for. This is not exactly like RAID. Read this and see. http://parlweb.parl.clemson.edu/pvfs/el2000/extreme2000.html JLF Sends... --- "Shawn T. Rutledge" wrote: > On Mon, Feb 26, 2001 at 09:47:16PM -0700, der.hans wrote: > > Not that cheap, but look at ecrix. Good tape drives, for cheap considering > > Yikes. Even the tape cartridges aren't cheap. You could buy quite a > pile of 30-gig hard drives for the cost of the tape drive plus the same > number of tapes. Tape tech. has always had a hard time staying > competitive, IMO; especially for home users. > > Incremental backup to CDRs makes a lot of sense; too bad the software > to do it would be kindof complex, as would the restore procedure. > > What I'd really like is a distributed FS, aggregating free space on all > of the machines on the network, and simultaneously guaranteeing 2-3x > redundancy of the data. Maybe the result would even be faster, because > several disks are seeking at once, just like with RAID. Then, just > manually back up important data once in a while as an extra failsafe. > I would probably only use such a filesystem for /home, because all the > irreplaceable data is there, and applications can be re-installed. > Maybe also for /usr/local, for the apps I spend a lot of time compiling > instead of just doing apt-get. > > Can coda do such tricks? > ===== -- JLF Sends... if ( $make_world || $make_build ) then { $HAVING_FUN_IS = $BUILDING{$BSD}; } else { print "Sorry you can't do that with this Operating System"; } __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get email at your own domain with Yahoo! Mail. http://personal.mail.yahoo.com/