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Great Article,
I remember when SSDs first came out, this was my major concern.
So, I threw one in my TiVo, it lasted ALMOST 5 years! And realizing that TiVo Continuously writes, 24x7.
About 2yrs into that experience, I was "sold" on SSDs, and especially with wear levelling.
I tend to to UPGRADE/REPLACE my SSDs at 2-3yr intervals. The challenge for me right now is HEAT.
The 4TB mVe can get QUITE WARM. When it is time to replace with an 8TB, I am not sure I would trust it inside my Laptop!
I used to replace/upgrade my HDDs every 2-3yrs as well. Clone them for backups. Then additional backups.
So I could plop in my cloned drives, and do restores on the remaining stuff...
The final step for me is to buy a LIKE KIND off-lease model of my laptop with full memory.
And maintain it as a cold spare. What's NICE about that, is that BEFORE I restore to my spare drives, I can
Actually install them in the COLD SPARE. Disable all networking, and BOOT it up. (Twice I have had to turn to a cold spare, and BOTH times I CHUCKLED over the CHEAP COST of a second computer, versus lost time!)
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OriginalGriff wrote: the write speed to the NAS with 6Gb/s HDD's is limited by the 1Gb network in my case anyway.
This is only correct as long as you are writing small amounts, so the disk's cache has a chance to do its job.
When writing amounts that don't fit in the disk's cache (> 256 MB), you are limited to the disk's native speed. As long as the data fit into a single, empty, cylinder, you might (on a large, fast, disk) be able to max out the disk interface at 6 Gb/s. If the R/W head must move to a different cylinder (or you must skip used blocks in a cache block, so a read/modify/write cycle may be needed), the write speed drops drastically.
A similar argument applies to read operations.
I have neglected the O/S overhead, file-system overhead, RAID overhead, etc., which would slow things further.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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I have not. The last NAS I had was gas petrol powered.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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Personally I use Linux for everything server related - it sucks as a desktop - however I digress. Does your NAS have a Linux shell ? if so paste the yaml below into a docker-compose.yml file and run docker-compose up -d. You can also map internal folders to local locations which will survive a restart of the container. Docker is cool
version: "3.2"
services:
sql-server-db:
container_name: sql-server-db
image: mcr.microsoft.com/mssql/server:2019-latest
ports:
- "1433:1433"
environment:
SA_PASSWORD: "PasswordGoesHere"
ACCEPT_EULA: "Y"
Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well-preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming “Wow! What a Ride!" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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You won't regret buying a QNAP.
They are wonderful. So Good.
Not an answer to your question though.
I have had heaps of WD drives and seagates as well.
Over the years it was the seagates that won the battle.
Therefore I only buy them now.
...and they are in my QNAPs
"Rock journalism is people who can't write interviewing people who can't talk for people who can't read." Frank Zappa 1980
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I have a Qnap TS-251+ which I bought new. It has two IronWolf drives in it, a 6TB and a 4TB. The 4TB got corrupted. No Idea why. Nevertheless, it's been working like a champ since I bought it in 2014. I use it for backup and storage of my converted DVDs.
It works great on the network. I put KODI on my Sony TV and watch all my DVDs from there. Can't go wrong with QNAP
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Very happy with my QNAP as well.
Only note of caution is to make sure to keep the thing updated and turn off remote access features.
There have been quite a few security issues over the last few years including ransomware attacks.
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Is there any tool out there that can take two MP3 files, and compare the audio portion of it (only) to determine whether it's the same content or not? That is, if you have the same file that has been copied and then had its ID3 tags or embedded images modified - is there something that could tell me they are still, essentially, "the same"...?
Anything using hashes on the file as a whole is obviously not a contender.
(Way) more complex scenario: How about comparing two files, but also ignoring the encoding bit rate? That is, if it's the same track, but one's been encoded at 128kbps vs another at 320kbps - then I'd want to get rid of the lower-bitrate version...I believe something like MusicBrainz could do that sort of thing - as I understand it, it "listens" to the audio regardless of encoding and tries to identify what it is...but it's not exactly suited for my purposes (comparing files in bulk). But I have to think because this exists, it is technically possible...so what could be used automate this and organize the results in a way that makes sense?
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Same "content"? Do a voice to text of the files; then compare the text. Probably need to run the import at normal speed, or less.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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I've used Duplicate Cleaner for many years now, not just for audio, and I've liked it enough to buy the pro version. I'm pretty sure it will do what you're looking for.
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Depending on the exact use case, you could decode the mp3 files, align both that they are in-phase (don't know if that's the correct word, mainly finding the point where both signals have the same waveform, works good for digital stuff, and less good if you have different recordings from tape), then phase invert one and adding them up (or simply subtract one of the other..). then calculate the peaks, if these are below a certain threshold (around < -50dB for audio from CD-Masters is a good value, but depends on the audio and encoding) chances are good it's the same audio.
getting the audio programmatically in-phase could be tricky it think, again, depending on the audio / conversions / encodings.
maybe that helps.
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Dandy72,
I just come with an idea, not a clear and tested solution. You could try to extract the fourrier transform of your signal, and then compare your two frequencies graphs. If they are close you can assume the two signals are similar.
As you manipulate signals, of course you certainly encounter all the issues related to unwanted noise, bit rate...etc.
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Don't forget about variable bit rate (VBR) mp3's, each frame of the mp3 could be a different bit rate.
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Just to follow up on my own thread.
Thanks to those who took the time to respond. This isn't some programming project I want to take on. And of those programs that exist...it sounds iffy at best. I wrote them all down and will check out later exactly what I can get done...
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You might like this if you have some mp3's on your PC you like to play (or like to play along with).
It's an MS sample app for UWP Audio Creation. You can just run it from VS.
The first example lets you load a sound file and alter the speed; faster or slower.
Listened to Clapton's Crossroads at .7; a totally new listening experience.
AudioGraph sample - Code Samples | Microsoft Docs
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Gerry Schmitz wrote: The first example lets you load a sound file and alter the speed; faster or slower.
Listened to Clapton's Crossroads at .7; a totally new listening experience.
AKA "making Mariah Carey go from human dog whistle to dude with a deep voice."
Wait, no. No audio processor can go that low.
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New Member Here Would Love To Be Welcomed By You Guys!
modified 10-Aug-22 8:57am.
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Be welcome
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Welcome !!
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I strongly recommend you change your username - it makes you look like a spammer!
(Unless of course you are a spammer, in which case, carry on.)
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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That or Singapore Car Plates's parents were just mean.
I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.
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Singapore noodle plate I can understand.
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I like the name as long as he doesn’t start spamming the place.
Then we would have wall-to-wall car plating!
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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Welcome
The most expensive tool is a cheap tool. Gareth Branwyn
JaxCoder.com
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