I own one and yes, I can attest that it gets very, very hot on the surface. However, almost a year in, and it hasn't missed a beat. It therefore does not bother me. Besides, my cat loves it.
@DZ-Jay My cat loves my Time Capsule too! :-) And my media player (Mac Mini).
And to keep this on topic, the Time Capsule does precisely what it says on the tin. I can't recall precisely when I bought it, but I'd guess it was last summer.
I can heartily recommend TimeMachineEditor ( http://timesoftware.free.fr/timemachineeditor/ ) so that Time Machine only runs backups twice a day, as I found every hour excessive.
The only thing that's stopping me getting a TimeCapsule is it's lack of RAID. I don't see the point of storing data on a medium that's no more resilient and redundant than my macbook.
Err, well the main point of it is that it's a backup.... if you're not backing up at the moment, you have precisely no redundancy, if you backup to a TM, you have a complete backup. It's unlikely (but possible and statistically little different) that both devices would fail at once... however, even with RAID both discs in that could fail at the same time - again, somewhat unlikely but still entirely possible.
For me it's great and as above, hasn't missed a beat at all.
@fifi agreed that its not more resilient and I don't own a time capsule, however I use timemachine on a firewire hd with my mbp and its proved to be a lifesaver on more than one occasion when I've either accidentally deleted some work or needed to roll back and it wasn't in vcs.
Having some form of backup is better than none, although raid is obviously far far better.
If you drop your little RAID box, or it gets fried from a mains surge because that cheap "surge protector" you bought doesn't protect like it should, or you're unlucky and a second drive dies before you get around to swapping out the one you should have, or you delete an important file...
Then you realise that RAID isn't backup. It's a live duplicate of your data - and it's stored right next to the data itself.
Now Apple expands time
r76
Can it now fry eggs twice as fast? #
Posted Friday 31st July 2009 14:08 GMT
Flames, because it's hot as hell
DZ-Jay
Re: Can it now fry eggs twice as fast? #
Posted Friday 31st July 2009 15:34 GMT
I own one and yes, I can attest that it gets very, very hot on the surface. However, almost a year in, and it hasn't missed a beat. It therefore does not bother me. Besides, my cat loves it.
-dZ.
Robbie
All good #
Posted Friday 31st July 2009 22:37 GMT
@DZ-Jay My cat loves my Time Capsule too! :-) And my media player (Mac Mini).
And to keep this on topic, the Time Capsule does precisely what it says on the tin. I can't recall precisely when I bought it, but I'd guess it was last summer.
I can heartily recommend TimeMachineEditor ( http://timesoftware.free.fr/timemachineeditor/ ) so that Time Machine only runs backups twice a day, as I found every hour excessive.
Anonymous Coward
Re: Time Machine Editor #
Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 09:10 GMT
Yes -- it is very nice not to have time machine kick in and start backing up some multi-gigabyte VMWare Image that you happen to using that day.
Anonymous Coward
Re: Besides, my cat loves it. #
Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 09:10 GMT
I love your cats
fifi
RAID #
Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 09:40 GMT
The only thing that's stopping me getting a TimeCapsule is it's lack of RAID. I don't see the point of storing data on a medium that's no more resilient and redundant than my macbook.
Scott Mckenzie
@FiFi #
Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 10:58 GMT
Err, well the main point of it is that it's a backup.... if you're not backing up at the moment, you have precisely no redundancy, if you backup to a TM, you have a complete backup. It's unlikely (but possible and statistically little different) that both devices would fail at once... however, even with RAID both discs in that could fail at the same time - again, somewhat unlikely but still entirely possible.
For me it's great and as above, hasn't missed a beat at all.
Peter Mount
RAID #
Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 11:04 GMT
@fifi agreed that its not more resilient and I don't own a time capsule, however I use timemachine on a firewire hd with my mbp and its proved to be a lifesaver on more than one occasion when I've either accidentally deleted some work or needed to roll back and it wasn't in vcs.
Having some form of backup is better than none, although raid is obviously far far better.
Rik Hemsley
RAID != backup #
Posted Monday 3rd August 2009 16:44 GMT
If you drop your little RAID box, or it gets fried from a mains surge because that cheap "surge protector" you bought doesn't protect like it should, or you're unlucky and a second drive dies before you get around to swapping out the one you should have, or you delete an important file...
Then you realise that RAID isn't backup. It's a live duplicate of your data - and it's stored right next to the data itself.