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Forum Discussion
Jon C.10
2 years agoCollaborator | Level 8
Disaster: Dropbox removing external disk support for Mac users :(
In case anyone's unaware... if you're a Mac user storing your Dropbox on an external drive, you'll shortly lose that ability. https://talk.tidbits.com/t/dropbox-drops-support-for-storing-files-on...
- 4 months agoHi Everybody,We’re excited to share that external drive support for Dropbox for macOS on File Provider is now available for testing as a beta feature. This is available to some users today and will be available to additional users on a rolling basis. In order to be eligible to test this feature, please follow the instructions in this Help Center article.Keep in mind that participation in beta programs is subject to the certain terms and conditions. There are certain additional participation requirements:
- This beta is only available to US-based users
- You must be on macOS 15 beta
- You must have an external drive that is APFS formatted and encrypted
Please let me know if you have any further questions!
psalcal
Collaborator | Level 10
A few things on the topic of internal SSD drives shinbeth .
The problem with your line of logic is you assume people work like you do. We don't.
Some people record lots of live musicians playing together. Some people record one track at a time. Some build beats and rap on top of them. Some use a ton of bandwidth-hogging string libraries, while scoring to video. Of course, for the latter purpose, you are right that large internal drives are ideal for that audio playback. BUT your one size fits all perspective is not a real world thing. An internal 8tb drive is completely foolish for most of the rest of us people. For the film scorer, well, there's your use case. But the rest of the 99% of us? Hell no, my friend.
In an article from 2009, the internal hard drive of Macs were able to easily play back 255 tracks at 24/96k (the most tracks Logic supported at a time). Those were SSD SATA3 drives. Those are indeed faster than a thunderbolt 4 drive, which does top out at 2mbps. I suck at math but you can figure out how many tracks the 2mbps SSD could record and play back. But let me say for all but a few of us, that is PLENTY. So the mythical 8tb internal drive is complete overkill.
Also, I have never once in my professional life experienced a single recording studio where they recorded audio from a band (multitrack) to the system volume. That's not for performance anymore but it is for redundancy reasons. If that single source of failure goes down the entire studio goes down. That is a non-starter.
In the video world, if you are working on short form content, by yourself, one project at a time, then maybe that 8tb internal drive will do you. In the corporate world where I work, we work on 100TB RAIDs. We work on multiple projects at a time, we pass them among roles (rough, color correction, sweetening, etc). We DON'T hand the machine off to each person. They instead access the SAN over fiber or 10gbe. 8TB is NOT enough for serious work on longer form video with multiple streams of 8k video. In this case your internal 8TB drive is woefully inadequate.
Also for many of us the idea of putting all our media on our boot drives is a TERRIBLE idea if there is a drive failure. In your world, you would absolutely have MULTIPLE machines with 8tb internal drives with the same drive image AND back them up together daily in case of a failure. With the above mentioned RAID systems, they are designed so multiple drives can fail and you don't lose data. Your mythical 8tb system is a very bad idea in that world.
Certainly my friend if you edit for YouTube and you do fewer projects at a time, you have great media management and you work by yourself, your internal drive option seems like a terrific solution! But unless you have a backup system you can immediately switch to in case of a failure or OS problem, you are walking on thin ice if you are a pro working on a deadline. The important thing is to NEVER think one size fits all.. somehow you are the expert and know everyone else's use cases and workflows? No offense, but it's clear you do not.
At any rate.. it's clear from this thread that there are a great many of us who disagree with you. Respectfully, it seems very foolish for you to come into this thread and tell us what we SHOULD be doing, even if in many cases we are professionals who have been doing this kind of work for over a decade.
shinbeth
2 years agoExperienced | Level 13
You're crying in the wilderness bro. None of what you terribly wrote added value for Pro use.
"Also for many of us the idea of putting all our media on our boot drives is a TERRIBLE idea if there is a drive failure. In your world, you would absolutely have MULTIPLE machines with 8tb internal drives with the same drive image AND back them up together daily in case of a failure. With the above mentioned RAID systems, they are designed so multiple drives can fail and you don't lose data. Your mythical 8tb system is a very bad idea in that world."
Absolutely not since like I said Time Machine makes a perfect clean copy of my entire system on two different external SSDs I keep in different locations + Dropbox at all times that's a winner here I can never encounter a failure. You say that 4 different systems (Mac + Time Machine on two different external SSDs in two different locations + Dropbox) could fault at the same time? Lol bull**bleep**. Also RAID systems can absolutely fault or burn or else and you'll be screwed. My solution is safer than yours, cheaper and I don't wanna go into RAID systems. Your mythical system is indeed a very bad idea in this world.
Just wait for the next-gen 100/200TB SSDs to come to market (https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/worlds-first-200tb-ssd-is-nearly-here-but-you-cant-use-it/) and all the problems will be solved, no need for your crap system. Having all your data on your Mac boot drive is a non-issue with Time Machine. I'll spend the 20k for 100TB drive if need be, plus another 20k on two external 100TB SSDs if my storage needs increase. Unless you work as an Enterprise with a dedicated system yes your RAID system can be interesting but I'd rather go with Dropbox Enterprise then (and yet those RAID systems would be need to be duplicated in many locations so that in case of burglary, fire etc. you're not **bleep**ed). Anyway 99% of us don't need such a hassle and we're better off with fast local SSD + Time Machine + Dropbox.
- psalcal2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10
I'm not going to go back and forth shinbeth . I made a case based on real world experiences. You do you, I'm OK with that.
I can tell you have not worked in a fast paced pro audio or video environment. There is no world where waiting for a Time Machine machine restore during a critical edit is acceptable. Ever. And that assumes you have no hardware failure and can simply wait for that Time Machine backup to restore from that spin drive backup. That is just not a thing in a pro environment.
Those RAID drives are backed up. There is a complete backup strategy in place involving LTN, cloud storage, and offsite storage. Again.. if you worked in that world you'd understand.
That you don't get it just shows you haven't experienced that. That's OK, by the way, if it works for you I think it's wonderful, but that you cannot see why it's not a universal fix just shows you don't have experience in those other worlds. No offense meant. Be well, friend. - shinbeth2 years agoExperienced | Level 13
Ok point taken. Well then I hope it will work out for you, really. I can understand why a RAID system would make sense in your work environment indeed. Alright let's hope for the best then.
But my experience with Dropbox dev and comm teams is that they're retarded. But let's hope still!
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