Archive for August, 2009
The Drobo – Recovering Data
by Craig Mayhew on Aug.24, 2009, under Guides/Fixes, Reviews/Experience
From this day forth I see the Drobo as useful as volatile storage when it comes to long term storage of my data.
How it happened:
I unplugged the Drobo from an old computer using the now ancient USB 1.1 and plugged it into my Ubuntu computer. The Ubuntu computer gave a message saying it couldn’t mount the volume. So I plugged it into my laptop to see what Vista had to say, but unfortunately Vista refused to mount the drive as well. After checking the drive in Vista’s disk manager I came to conclusion that Vista saw it as a RAW partition! It had completely forgotten that it was an NTFS partition so Vista didn’t know what to do with it.
My immediate thought was the Drobo is going to start freeing up space and wiping the drives sector by sector. Fortunately I couldn’t hear any disk activity so I thought to myself that I may be able to recover the data. I used a copy of EASUES Data Recovery to do a scan of the hard disk to find lost partitions. It took 48 hours to do the scan, which is ridiculous when you consider I only had 300GB of data on the Drobo and the Drobo’s entire capacity was only 500GB, 48 hours is fairly ridiculous at 1.7Mb/s.
At this point my laptop where I was recovering the data to, crashed. Not a problem as I had my initial scan saved so I could continue where I left off. I wandered off for 2 minutes to come back and find my computer had started a file system scan of the Drobo and it had attempted to repair damaged sectors!! This could be really good or really bad. After windows booted and I franticly continued the scan I ran into another problem! The scan had not remembered where it had stopped so I had to leave it running for a further 48 hours! This time around however I had the mortifying experience of watching the little blue lights go out one at a time on the Drobo’s front panel. It appears that the file system “fix” that vista had run had in fact instructed the Drobo to truncate the “problem” parts of the disk. This consequently meant that I was running the scan for the second time and that this time the Drobo was probably slowly destroying my data. As it turned out the file system scan had destroyed a lot of data but in the end I managed to get a portion of my data back.
Important lessons:
- If you delete something from a drobo, your data is gone… forever.
- If you Drobo file system gets damaged, do not let windows or any other operating system repair it or you will lose some or all of your data.
- The drobo is slow, you can’t recover data in a timely manner (if you can recover it at all).
- Don’t trust the Drobo, as it is only a single device it cannot provide an ultimate solution (or even a reliable one). I will be moving to some kind of distributed private cloud storage setup and will blog about that when I’ve got one going.
- During the time that I have owned the Drobo, it has failed twice. No other disks, flash drives or dvds have died in my house since I bought the drobo. So the Drobo fails more often than any of my other storage devices.
Stonehenge
by Craig Mayhew on Aug.09, 2009, under Friends/Family
I visited Stonehenge yesterday, it gave me an opportunity to begin playing with panoramic shots on my camera. These could have been optimized more and the number of pixels reduced as the quality does drop off as you zoom in on these images. The largest stone weighs 47 tonnes by the way … and 30% of it is below the ground .. and they moved some of the stones over 240 miles. Some theories say this might be possible with over 500 people tugging at leather ropes with another 100 people laying huge log rollers under the stone.
And for anyone who is really really into their cameras, here is the spec on these images:
| Camera manufacturer | SONY |
|---|---|
| Camera model | DSC-T500 |
| Exposure time | 1/400 sec (0.0025) |
| F Number | f/5.6 |
| ISO speed rating | 80 |
| Lens focal length | 5.8 mm |
| Orientation | Normal |
| Horizontal resolution | 72 dpi |
| Vertical resolution | 72 dpi |
| Software used | Adobe Photoshop CS4 Windows |
| Y and C positioning | 2 |
| Exif version | 2.21 |
| Image compression mode | 3 |
| Exposure bias | 0 |
| Maximum land aperture | 3.625 |
| Metering mode | Pattern |
| Light source | Unknown |
| Flash | Flash did not fire, compulsory flash suppression |
| Color space | sRGB |
| Custom image processing | Normal process |
| Exposure mode | Auto exposure |
| White Balance | Auto white balance |
| Scene capture type | Portrait |
| Contrast | Normal |
| Saturation | Normal |
| Sharpness | Normal |




