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What are you (and members of your unit) using for data storage? Where do you store your files, pics, unit e-pubs, etc?
We all create long, archaically formatted military documents, powerpoints, pdfs, etc.
Where do you keep yours for handy recall and reuse, especially as you move from base to base or forward deploy?
We all create long, archaically formatted military documents, powerpoints, pdfs, etc.
Where do you keep yours for handy recall and reuse, especially as you move from base to base or forward deploy?
Posted 11 y ago
Responses: 18
My unit used a share drive on the intranet. It hardly ever worked, always went down, synched wrong, etc. So we were allowed to use CD-Rs. As you can imagine that was very inefficient.
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Maj Ahron Oddman
Yea the inefficiency is actually driving me nuts right now. Well thinking of it is driving me nuts. I'm working on non-DoD computer using commercial, cloud storage, so I'm doing ok. But thinking of how inefficient and how immobile, or non-expeditionary as Marines say, our data is, drives me crazy. And when I think of the growing knowledge base of our RallyPoint community, I think of 100,000s of hard drives, share drives, and how difficult it is to share and pass on that information, especially across branches. We can always email, but some files are too large for email, right? On my google drive, I can click one button and share a working copy of document with dozens of people, and we can work on it at the same time; it updates in real-time!
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CPT Zachary Brooks
MSG Huffman, you beat me to it. I was going to say we upgraded to killobytes decades ago.
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I use Dropbox for my personal stuff it is easy to check on any of my multiple devices (phone, tablet and computer).
Officially I tried to use AKO Files but I find it slow and the storage limit is too small to have all the files I need. In a hurry I just email it to myself but can be a pain to locate files later on.
Officially I tried to use AKO Files but I find it slow and the storage limit is too small to have all the files I need. In a hurry I just email it to myself but can be a pain to locate files later on.
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I use different things for different situations. I use my external HDDs to back up pictures, videos, and documents so I can access them at any time when I may need them.
I use Dropbox and my gmail account to transfer small documents in short periods or from work to home and vice versa.
Lastly, I have been using Google Drive to keep my movie list up to date on my phone so I stop buying duplicate movies. Up to 940 titles so far!
I use Dropbox and my gmail account to transfer small documents in short periods or from work to home and vice versa.
Lastly, I have been using Google Drive to keep my movie list up to date on my phone so I stop buying duplicate movies. Up to 940 titles so far!
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I don't like using the share drive because you always have issues with connectivity and worse, you can't make changes if someone opened a file and didn't close it. Then all you can do is view a read-only copy.
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I actually use a combination of the above for personal use. For archival purposes I use an external hard drive. For day to day I use cloud storage and have my computer and tablet auto-sync through the cloud so my data is current between them. This works well for me and allows for a good degree of redundancy as well.
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It really depends on what you are doing with the stuff that you have and how you plan on using it. Either way I recommend encrypting everything before it gets saved in a common access location or the cloud if that is the solution you plan on using. There are a variety of cloud storage solutions but it really depends on the feature-set you are looking for (and what is authorized on your network) some of the things to look for are space, redundancy, encryption, access permissions, and company history.
Local share drives can be safer in terms of preventing PII from leaking on the internet but, as mentioned in another comment below, has issues with multiple access. If you are sharing on the same computer you can always store files in the public directory. that will allow any user on the same computer access to the same files. And if you have the infrastructure for it you can always share files through SharePoint. this system allows for reversioning, check-in and check-out and certen types of files can be broken down into multiple files to allow for multiple access such as power point presentations where each department requires access to their own slides.
Local share drives can be safer in terms of preventing PII from leaking on the internet but, as mentioned in another comment below, has issues with multiple access. If you are sharing on the same computer you can always store files in the public directory. that will allow any user on the same computer access to the same files. And if you have the infrastructure for it you can always share files through SharePoint. this system allows for reversioning, check-in and check-out and certen types of files can be broken down into multiple files to allow for multiple access such as power point presentations where each department requires access to their own slides.
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I have become a fan of drop box. This way I don't need to use the military forbidden jump/thumb drives, and am able to access my data from any computer.
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Col (Join to see)
I don't use it for unit data that needs to be secure. Only day to day taskers, lectures, powerpoints that don't pose a threat to OPSEC. As far as security goes, nothing is really truly "secure".
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