Friday, October 24, 2008

Feeling DROOBY...

I just received my Drobo 2.0 on Thursday, and let me tell you...I'm excited! I used to use a grand total of 15 external hard-drives (16 if you include both drives in my RAID 1 system...and this doesn't include internal drives I just have laying around) to store all my media on. Why the ridiculous number? Because I was afraid of data loss! So for every 1TB (1TB=1024GB or 1000GB depending on what system you go by) of storage I needed, I had 2TB to make sure if a drive died I'd have it backed up. Since quite a few of those drives were 500GB Western Digital My Books, this means I need 4(FOUR!!!) drives to store 1TB of needed space (2 for storage, 2 for backup). Some of my drives were larger, but I currently have about 8TB of storage total that I am using. So there's two questions that I'm going to answer that you probably would ask me if you were standing in front of me right now...


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One of several shelves that hold my storage and battery backups...just in case...

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8 internal drives, 2 external and a Dundee award (from "The Office" for the 2 people that don't watch the show)

1st: "You have how many drives? Why?"
The reason why I have so much storage is for keeping all the photos of all of your beautiful faces and the beautiful places I've been to backed up in triplicate, as well as organizing all of my digital media ranging from a huge iTunes music library to old family photos, to about ton of movies and TV episodes. Yes, all of my movies and TV shows on my drives are LEGALLY bought and I own all of them on DVD (some I bought on iTunes) and rip them to my computers so I can watch them over my network on my computers or sync with my iPhone, without having to track down the disc and waiting for it to load in a DVD player. Even with 8TB of storage, I barely have 800GB free across all of my drives. I am a pack-rat of digital media...I have an addiction...


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Glossy...SUPERglossy!

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Doesn't get much less complicated than this!

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FW800 + USB2.0 = Awesome!

2nd: "What on Earth is a Drobo?"
A Drobo is an amazing piece of technology. It is very much like RAID 5 array, but it is self-healing and you can mix and match drives and upgrade your storage at any time. So what's RAID 5? RAID stands for redundant array of independent drives(or disks), which is used in computers and servers to either provide very fast data transfers OR very solid backups of you data. RAID 5 is designed to backup data across 3 or more drives in such a way that allows any one of the drives to completely fail without losing any data (meaning you can recover you data and then replace the drive. This allows for massive amounts of storage with very minimal risk of loss of important data. The downside of RAID 5 is that if one of the drives fail, you have to pull your data off, wipe the drives clean, buy a new drive and rebuild the RAID from scratch...BIG pain! Big waste of time! Not to mention RAID 5 systems are pretty pricey.

What makes the Drobo so unique is that if a drive fails, you can simply pop it out and throw in a different drive (ANY capacity, doesn't have to be the same) and the Drobo will automatically shift the data around to make sure that you data is again backed up across all drives in it and your data is protected. I've had a number of hard drive enclosures and hard drive power supplies die on me, and 1-2 drives fail on me too. Now if TWO drives fail simultaneously (which would be almost impossible...note that I said almost...like finding an unused lottery ticket on the ground that's the billion dollar winner...)that's when you'll lose data. That's why I still plan to use some of my existing externals just as a tertiary backup of really important stuff like my family and my client's photos.

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Massive nest of mess...

Another big reason I got one is that I'm sick of having to dig through a GIGIANTIC rats nest of power cables, USB and Firewire cables just to figure out which of them kicked the bucket. With this guy, I have 1 power cable and 1 FireWire cable to worry about...down from 4 of each with my current setup! Drobo can store upto 4 SATA drives and depending on what drives you throw in there can give you up to 4.1TB (usable storage, not including space reserved for backups [as of this post 1.5TB drives were the largest available]) but with hard drive sizes ever increasing, you will eventually be able to throw four 4TB drives in there! I'm starting off with just the one Drobo 2.0 (with Firewire 800...yes Steve! IEEE1394 is still very much needed these days!) and will be dumping a couple of my drives in it to save on space, power outlets, cables and overall headache.

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Snapshot of Drobostation software seeing my drives, but also...not seeing my drives?

Also I feel it is fair to say that I definitely had some problems with my unit initially, but I want to blame it on the drives I was using, not the Drobo itself. I found 4 250GB SATA drives I was using as a pair of RAID 0 systems I had in a desktop I built 3-4 years ago, that I was no longer using (back when I was a PC junkie, and 250GB's was HUGE!). I had some wierd formatting issues that I'm working out with Drobo Support, but I bought a couple of new SATA drives to throw into my Drobo to start from sratch and all seems to be functioning perfect...for now. I won't wipe my data off the old drives for a couple weeks just to be on the safe side for now though. If I'm thrilled with Drobo (and I expect to be) I'll order another one to hold another set of drives to further simplify my life! As Leo Laporte would say, "I'm feeling Droooooooby!"

My initial impressions (outside of the formatting/won't mount properly issue...which again I think was a problem with my drives) are extremely positive. I open up boxes of a TON of new electronic devices, and except for Apple products, the experience is very bland. Drobo was packed in a really nice foam enclosure and a "muslin" type wrap and even as unimportant as this may seem, the little extra touches go a loooonnnggg way to making you feel like you just invested in a high-quality product...not a piece of junk. Also very rarely are such high quality power cables and power supplies included. Usually hard drives, PCs, enclosures, ect. all come with cheapo $1 cables that feel like dental floss. I've never seen such a thick FW800 cable in my life! Again, this may seem trivial but it helps ease that buyers remorse syndrome when you've spent $500 on a box to hold hard drives. Build quality of the Drobo is top notch and feels like it could withstand a cannonball. My only complaint is the front cover is extremely glossy and seems to be a bit of a dust magnet, and glossy plastic is kinda hard to get dust off of (it tends to just slide around avoiding your attempts to remove it). I doubt this will become a major concern; after all, it will just be sitting on a shelf next to my computers...it isn't something that needs to be spotless at all times. Check back in a few weeks to this post for a followup on performance and reliability!


Also...I wanted to get this post up quick before I forgot I ever starting typing it, so I haven't gotten around to taking high-quality review photos for this like I did for the SB900/Sony a350 reviews...all these images are just quick snapshots with my iPhone, hopefully if I get time I'll swap out these images for better ones soon.

UPDATE: Well I've had my Drobo up and running for about 2.5 weeks or so, and the thing has been running like a champ. It hasn't dismounted on me even once, keeps up with streaming video over an Apple TV, while watching something else Macbook Pro over the network WHILE watching a yet another movie on the Mac Mini it is connected to. This empirical test was also done during a file transfer to the Drobo in excess of 25GB!!! The only strange thing I've encountered with it is a truly bizzare Scifi type noise when the drives start spinnning up after the computer put itself to sleep. That could be related to something with powerlines with my audio system or battery backup unit, but it's truly odd. The only way I could describe the noise is as what you would expect a ray-gun from a 1960's Scifi movie would sound like if it was charging up to fire, like a bwoooooppp!!! Imagine four separate drives spinning up in unison while a low RPM fan kicks in as well...there you go! I've swapped out drives several times since the inital setup and each time it was able to shift my data around without any problems, I even tried a disk swap while transferring files to the Drobo, although I would recommend avoiding that whenever possible.

To put it simply, I HIGHLY RECOMMEND this product and definitely plan on getting at least 1 more in the next 6 months or so. Any photographer, videographer, or really anyone with something to lose (data I mean) should get one of these, even if you only put a couple 250GB drives in to hold you personal photos and videos from vacations and family events...NOTHING in the world is more important than your family and the images you have to remember them by, I learned this first hand about a month ago when my grandfather died and my family had virtually no good photos of him that weren't heavily faded or washed out from the passing of time. My only suggestion is that oyu make sure your drives WORK before you put them in, that was the cause of my frustration the first few days. Also keep in mind that it could easily take several hours for the Drobo to optimize itself again if you replace a small drive with a very large drive. When I replaced my 250GB with a 1TB drive it took about 10 hours since I had another two 500GB drive and a 1TB in it already.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Networking Extreme...

A few weeks ago I shot a wedding down in Austin Texas with the beautiful and talented photographer Kim, of Kimberly Brooke Photographic. I met her through a mutual friend Armin Defiesta. Armin was unavailable to shoot with Kim that weekend as he was shooting a wedding that day already, but he forwarded my info to Kim, who I had never met before. After a couple phone calls and emails talking about a myriad of subjects, Kim had me fly down and second shoot with her in one of the nicest venues for one of the nicest couples I've ever met. Kelly and Brett just had so much love for each other, which showed up in every click of my camera (even when they weren't in the picture!). It was a gorgeous outdoor ceremony at Austin71 with a great view of the countryside as a backdrop to a perfectly lit (that always helps) afternoon ceremony, which led directly into some great music from the band "Radiostar" which played the best mix of top songs from the 80's that I'd ever heard. I'll let the pics do the rest of the talking, here's some of my fav's:

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Have to add in some detail shots...

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Beautiful bride makes the job REAL easy...

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Talk about a get-away car!!!

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I don't know whose got a goofier face, but at least she was tryin!

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We got there kinda early, so Kim and I did a little impromtu photoshoot...even caught her chimpin' in the mirror while the girls were getting their makeup done!

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I caught her dancing on the job too! LOL!

I had a blast, and would encourage any photographer reading this to network, network, network (check out [b]ecker's [b]school for example)! You'll never know who you meet, or what you'll learn. Every other photographer (whether they shoot weddings, sports, fashion, product,ect) I've ever talked to has taught me something, even if they weren't trying to! We should all try to help each other out to expand our ability to constantly move the bar up a notch to give our clients a consistent world-class experience!

Also keep a look out on Kim's blog for her post about the wedding!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Trespassing in Georgetown (Aly and Dustin's E-Shoot)

So we have a [unspoken] trespassing rule in photography... "It's better [read "easier"] to ask for forgiveness than to go and seek out permission..." this rule pertains to trespassing on people's property in areas like Alexandria, DC, Georgetown, Leesburg, well pretty much anywhere in which private property has WAY more character and 'cool-factor' than public places. This past weekend Erin and I had our engagement shoot for Alison and Dustin in Georgetown (therefor the tip-toe trespassing law holds true). We walked all over town on a near-cloudless Sunday afternoon/evening and found some great little alleys and doorsteps to intrude on (even a classic VW Beatle to use as a prop). I'm looking forward to their wedding that Erin and I are shooting for Armin Defiesta Photography in May, it sounds like it will be a blast! Check out Erin's post too! Here are some of my favorites from the day:

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...more trespassing, unfortunately the gate had some pretty fresh paint on it...

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...had to wait at those stairs for like 5 minutes waiting for people to stop getting in our shot...

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...Alison grabbed a camera and chased after the celebrity [Dustin] outside Papa-Razi

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...threw in some off-camera flash for a little fill as the Sun was dipping behind the buildings...

Friday, October 10, 2008

New view on the World (Wide Web)

Just got finished setting up my new 24" LCD. I REALLY wanted to get an S-IPS panel, but I really didn't want to pay 300% more for one. I calibrate all my monitors to prints that I've made on my Epson R1800 and prints I've received from the labs I order from, so if there's a little bit of visual color shift from different angles it doesn't matter to me. I just need it to be accurate from where I'm sitting, so I settled for a mid-range display. This replaces a 4 year old LG L1720P (TN type panel) that I had purchased two of when they first came out for $480 each...it's ridiculous to me how cheap good electronic gear is now.

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Here's what my "office" looks like now...a bit like the matrix. (from left to right, 24" Samsung LCD,15.4" Macbook Pro, 17" LG LCD, 40" Samsung LCD) I'm so addicted...I'm even considering picking up a Mac Pro sometime next year after the Nehalm processor refresh and picking uo another 40" LCD to use as my primary system...I need to go to counseling or something!

Monday, October 6, 2008

It's all about the details...

One of the things I love to capture when shooting a wedding or any other sort of event is the little details and parts of what makes that event special. I find that these small components are what brings back more vivid memories. The only thing I love capturing more than details is pure unbridled enthusiasm (if you don't know the reference, then NO SOUP FOR YOU). Here are some of the details I found unique or interesting at a recent wedding along the North Shore of Maryland that I shot with Armin.

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Bill was into his guitars and music...nothing says it better than custom made picks...

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Even an ordinary chair bathed in a late afternoon glow from a setting Sun can tell you a little more about the day and how gorgeous the ceremony was...

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The florist had set up these very unique candle holders to illuminate the post-ceremony celebration...

You see why I find little details so critical in telling the story of your special day? It's all about the things you may forget about years from now, but just like a familiar song or scent, it brings back such vivid memories of one of the happiest days in your life!