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As Above what do you think of it ?
I use it for backup NOT storage.
And it’s great
Not really, mine just evolved and every time I use it I think ‘I ought to sort this properly’.I also use it but probably not to the best of its abilities. Any tips on albums/folders.

When I buy a camera or lens or car or even a house, the strategy isn’t based on it being a forever decision.Im not so sure about the Nature of @droj 's post but along similar lines I am not sure why would trust your achieve to any 3rd party site. You not only loose control of it but you become reliant on how they want to run their business. I.e at the mercy of their price rises, stuck paying subscription fees ad infinitum and at risk if they decided to limit, change or end the service - a bit like when Flickr went from totally free to their paid model 15 years or so ago etc.
In my opinion, and feel free to disagree, its a short term way of looking at things.
I won't derail the thread with my backup solution but happy to discuss if thats the way the thread goes.
I’ve only recently become aware of the term ens***ification, now, id be wary of using Amazon
And for those of us who didn’t see the video?I think you might have seen the same Norwegian video as me!
When I buy a camera or lens or car or even a house, the strategy isn’t based on it being a forever decision.
Why would something as trivial as a second string backup of my images need to be a concrete decision I am ‘trapped’ by? Why can’t I change provider if their business model changes or I no longer feel it’s VFM.
I’m personally not a great fan of cloud based or indeed subscription based services. However I get frustrated at some of the arguments used against them.
What if Amazon change their business model? Or put up the price?
I can choose to leave, it’s not the world’s greatest puzzle.
Well here’s my take.I guess it depends on a number of factors. If you are storing years worth of files, raw files, for events then it becomes prohibative to move or change - a bit like being tied into a camera system, so if something does change - Like they pull the service or limit it, and the cynic in me says nothing that good lasts forever - you risk a high price in both time and cost to sort it out.
For example if you are storing 10TB of files on the cloud and have to move provider, sourcing another provider and then re-uploading those images is going to take a long time, especially if you don't have local copies as well (relying on the cloud base as safe to have one copy) or the space to transfer those back to your system.
That would be my worry anyway. I'd rather be in control of my backup solution personally which is why I use a second offsite NAS.
Any proper cloud based ‘storage’ will allow bulk downloading.I don't use Amazon Photos, but I know with many of the cloud storage options it's not uploading that's an issue but downloading.
Questions to ask, is there an extra cost to download, and with regards to Amazon is there a way to bulk download. Selecting each individual image in a 10tb catalogue is going to be an f-ing pain. A backup solution is pretty useless if you can't retrieve your images.
Also, if you did happen to find a site that didn't allow bulk downloading (as Phil says though, this is very unlikely), you can almost guarantee that someone will come up with a tool to do it for you.Any proper cloud based ‘storage’ will allow bulk downloading.
I think photographers often get confused about this because they pretended services like photobucket, Flickr annd even Google photos are ‘backup solutions’ when they’re not and were never meant to be. They’re photo sharing platforms.
I suppose the water gets muddied when ‘storage solutions’ start to offer guest logins that means they begin to look like they’re ‘sharing’ apps too.
I’m not sure I’ve got a good enough ‘friend’ that I could use their electricity 24/7Also, if you did happen to find a site that didn't allow bulk downloading (as Phil says though, this is very unlikely), you can almost guarantee that someone will come up with a tool to do it for you.
I don't want to hijack the thread, but how do people set up an offsite NAS? I feel like the only way I could do that would be to ask my friend if I could stick some hardware in his loft...
I hadn't seen it, just watched it - it's the perfect explainerI think you might have seen the same Norwegian video as me!
And for those of us who didn’t see the video?
There’s no way to guess the missing letters
That’s not just the Internet, that’s the inevitable outcome of unregulated capitalism.I hadn't seen it, just watched it - it's the perfect explainer
The video summed up ens***ification nicely. The term was coined up Cory Doctorow, and used to describe how online platforms are at first designed with the user in mind, then it rewards advertisers / partners and then it makes the service bad for both..
www.onesdr.com

You’re looking at the enterprise level AWS.It's not if cloud storage will allow download, but how much will it cost if you want to leave, it can cost 4 times as much to leave as it does to store
Cloud Storage Cost Calculator: Compare AWS, Google Cloud & Azure [2026] - OneSDR - Technology
☁️ With cloud storage becoming essential for businesses, developers, and creators, it’s critical to understand how much you’re really paying. Whether you’re backing up photos or hosting terabytes of data, ... Read morewww.onesdr.com
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Same here Phil! So how do people do it, is it just another company offering storage? Surely that’s just cloud storage with a different name?I’m not sure I’ve got a good enough ‘friend’ that I could use their electricity 24/7![]()
The standard ‘offsite backup’ is old school generally. You make a physical backup of your data and store it off site.Same here Phil! So how do people do it, is it just another company offering storage? Surely that’s just cloud storage with a different name?
It might be in bad taste to point out the built in obsolescence of using a parents home for this.RE offsite nas. I started with no knowledge except a fairly decent working knowledge of how computers work (system building etc) but no knowledge of networking protocals. I just used youtube
1.) Home NAS by synology
2.) Second Synology NAS in a cupboard at my parents house
3.) Set up Tailscale (VPN) and link both NASs to Tailscale account - could also be done with Open VPN and a standard VPN
4.)Set up Hyperbackup software on synology
5.) confirgure backup schedule
6.) done.
It didn't even occur to me about just having some storage, I got hung up on it being online so you could back up remotely. This makes more sense, thanks!The standard ‘offsite backup’ is old school generally. You make a physical backup of your data and store it off site.
So typically you’d use 2 drives. You run your backup, take it to your mates house, and swap the disk for last weeks, then next week do the same. So you have an offsite copy that’s up to a week out of date.
But I’ll reiterate, unless you’re working at enterprise levels, then your offsite solution should be the backup to your backup.
that strongly resembles my usage "strategy"Not really, mine just evolved and every time I use it I think ‘I ought to sort this properly’.![]()
...how do people set up an offsite NAS? I feel like the only way I could do that would be to ask my friend if I could stick some hardware in his loft...
NoIs Amazon JPEG only?