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Comment Re:call them (Score 2) 171

I don't know why you were modded down. I believe most banking is legally required to retain every customer transaction for 7 years. What does it exactly mean to "delete your Wells Fargo Online Account" when they are legally required to maintain your records?

If at any point your relationship involves a financial transaction, that company might have a valid interest in holding onto the receipts through at least the next year's taxes, and may have a responsibility to hold the records for longer.

Comment Re:call them (Score 1) 171

> I've never given correct information to any website to start.

My electric power bill, my garbage, other services are all website paperless situations. So I give websites correct info in some situations.

I also buy things online all the time from places like Amazon, you have to give them your address and name or the stuff won't come to you.

The thing that bugs me is when they mail catalogs to me ENDLESSLY. Paper catalogs. I mean, I browsed their website and bought their product, so I know the web exists, why are they killing trees for goodness sake?! I belong to a service that helps me unsubscribe from those, but some of these catalogs are dang hard to stop.

Comment Re:It's more like a stunt to me (Score 1) 229

> Nobody at the C-level takes responsibility for anything.

I'm not so sure, I think it matters which C-level position you are talking about, some are hotseats...

In small to mid-size businesses (1,000 employees or less) I think it's super common to fire your VP of sales after 2-3 bad quarters and fire your CEO after 4-5 bad quarters, regardless of what situation is to blame. The CTO is almost immune from taking any responsibility, and unless there is embezzling I'm pretty sure the CFO is a cushy job with great security and awesome salary where your underlings do all the real work.

Regardless of whether I like them as human beings, I have been impressed by the risk taken by VP of sales at the high tech startups I've worked at. These men and women are compensated 50% by commission, so early on in a startup (in the era of low sales) their salaries are shockingly low and if sales don't pick up they are personally blamed, even if the product is young, buggy, and has better competitors in the market. VP of sales is a hot seat, we went through 4 in 4 years at one of my previous companies.

Comment Re:There's probably patents involved (Score 4, Interesting) 289

In a another example, my HP Veer Smartphone (it's the Palm Pre line) has a magnetic charging cable that can ALSO carry data and audio!

Seriously, the HP Veer hardware was nicely designed, but the software is a train wreck. I still can't understand how the iPhone doesn't have a MagSafe recharge option, but my HP Veer does?

Comment Re:not super expensive at all (Score 1) 1146

This is 1780 lumens (and $53): http://www.amazon.com/Philips-423525-White-Light-Dimmable/dp/B00B2KUA3Y

I own two, and although they look goofy when turned off, I've been happy with the amount of light it puts out and the color.

BTW, I was a hold out for a long time, I stock piled "dorm burner" halogen stand up lamps for years with bootleg 600 watt bulbs (now banned), I still miss the incredible light those things generated. I hate CFLs, I've broken a couple and the mercury cannot be good to inhale. I'm going LED, even if it costs hundreds of times more than CFL. I just wish the manufacturers would increase the lumens output.

Comment Re:Common knowledge (Score 2) 270

very common for multiple drives in an array to fail within a short time window, due to shared environmental problems

Exactly. We had one interesting incident where in the middle of the night, 3 pods right next to each other in a rack all went berserk and all their RAID fell apart. That's 135 drives all at once (3 pods each with 45 hard drives). We reassembled them all, and the VERY NEXT NIGHT at the same time it happened again. We moved all three servers to different ends of the datacenter -> and finally figured out which server was causing the problems. The fan bearings on a fan were going bad, and when the fan came on it vibrated the entire cabinet. We have "nightly cleanup" jobs that run to verify data integrity and delete files we no longer want, this was enough load to cause the CPU to heat up enough to trigger the bad fan.

Comment Re:Common knowledge (Score 1) 270

I'm not sure what you mean by "turnover"? If you are asking how many customers we have, I apologize but I'm not allowed to release that number (not my fault, I would post it on our homepage with a live number if they let me!)

But I was mostly joking, I think by "major" UnknowingFool meant the largest 4 or 5 companies on earth like Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft and maybe Yahoo. I assure you that Backblaze is in no danger of displacing any of the members of that list. :-)

Comment Re:I think people just won't own these cars (Score 1) 140

Engineers know how to tunnel through limestone, they created dedicated machines for it, here is an article: http://science.howstuffworks.com/engineering/structural/tunnel4.htm and here is an example where it was used: http://midwest.construction.com/midwest_construction_projects/2013/0729-deep-below-indianapolis-a-race-to-control-waste.asp

Comment Re:You're buying an extended warranty (Score 2) 270

This is a great point. Five years ago Backblaze started with 1 TByte hard drives. Now we are deploying 4 TByte hard drives. The power consumption is about equal. So there is a moment in time that it is worth buying new 4 TByte drives and migrating data from the 1 TByte drives and throw away the 1 TByte drives JUST TO SAVE MONEY ON ELECTRICITY.

Our electrical bill is about $45,000 / month right now. There is a reason Google and Yahoo built those massive datacenters up along the hydro electric 3 cent/kWh Oregon/Washington border. And it's all about total cost of ownership, and EVERYTHING is on the table.

Comment Re:Common knowledge (Score 1) 270

Trying to read a damaged sector is less reliable than reading the undamaged redundant copy.

You're thinking about it wrong. You always want the maximum amount of information from every drive, you can choose to use that information however you like, I don't want "Enterprise" drives that won't try hard to get every last bit.

Here is an example: We have had problems reassembling / resyncing RAID arrays because one stubborn drive pops out and fails too easily (we run two parity drives - so if you are already down 2 drives a 3rd stubborn drive is a bummer). If the drive would just stay in and try harder, we could get through that particular operation. Backblaze then adds it's own end-to-end SHA-1 on every file - trust us, we'll absolutely know for certain whether or not we recovered the file accurately or not from that particular RAID array or not. But until we reassemble the RAID array and get the file system back online, we can't even check what we are holding. Fighting with it costs us IT time. Again-> we have no performance problems at all. I know this is hard for some organizations to grasp when you never seem to have enough IOPS. But the nature of online backup is not like the nature of your billing or account info database.

Comment Re:Common knowledge (Score 2) 270

I'd happily pay 2x or 3x the money to get 20x the write endurance.

That only makes sense if you are hitting the write limits. If the drive dies because the bearings wear out after 5 years of spinning regardless of the number of writes, you have just paid 3x the money and gotten exactly zero benefit.

Comment Re:Common knowledge (Score 1) 270

Enterprise drives typically range from 18000rpm at the very high end...10K rpm probably the most common for bulk storage

Backblaze pays something like $45,000 / month in our electrical bill. We vastly prefer "green" drives that spin slower and use less electricity. There are many, many "Enterprise" applications in the world that are not bottle necked on spindle speed (like backup and Shutterfly-type big-data-rarely-accessed), those enterprises deserve slower drives. I guess I object to using the word "Enterprise" to describe "Fast" - why not just mark your drive as 15,000 RPM or 7,200 RPM and be done with it? No need to add the pointless label "Enterprise Drive".

SMART reporting is much more consistent for enterprise drives

No way. All hard drives do SMART reporting. Sometimes the "bridge" between the processor and the hard drives won't pass the information, so a cheap USB enclosure might be hiding the hard drive SMART stuff from you, but that isn't the hard drive's fault. In fact, we have an expensive Dell drive shelf with an LSI (?) controller that hides our enterprise drive SMART stats from us, very annoying. There is no correlation between "Enterprise" and "SMART reporting".

some manufactures are intentionally disabling typical enterprise firmware features on the consumer models, drive commands that are helpful for hardware raid

The whole concept of RAID is that it is a software layer on top of all the cheap drives. RAID doesn't require any interesting instructions. Pretty much needs to write data to an individual drive and read it back later.

I wouldn't be surprised if usage patterns over 5-10yrs resulted in a significant divergence.

Time will prove you right or wrong, we plan on updating and releasing these numbers every few years. Stay tuned....

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