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I remember a reddit AMA where they mentioned that they don't actually do any de-duplication. This isn't Dropbox and nowhere as reliable as S3 - its literally as if you're renting remote consumer external drives for offsite backup, for that usage pattern Backblaze makes some sense.

And those pods are cool. But I agree, a somewhat flawed approach.




>This isn't Dropbox and nowhere as reliable as S3 - its literally as if you're renting remote consumer external drives for offsite backup

What are their reliability promises? I think that they're doing some mirroring of the data, but I'm still not sure about the rest of their service details.

I'm considering using them for backups, but have not decided yet.

I came upon this [1] discussion here, from 3 years ago. I'm diving in :)

Yeah, the pods are really sweet and they provide all the design documents [2]!

[1]: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=803136

[2]: http://blog.backblaze.com/2011/07/20/petabytes-on-a-budget-v...

edit: added additional details about the design


I don't think it should be assumed that there is no data redundancy between pods, afterall from prior blog posts it seems like the pods can be taken offline. I'd also posit that a properly constructed RAID array can mitigate the risks of using consumer parts; afterall that is the "I" in RAID.




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