Linux and data storage?

nick G Nick6489 at andrelouis.com
Sun Sep 26 21:58:21 EDT 2004


The Tool itself is called FlashFXP.  FXP is the protacall.
Thanks,
Nick
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Sina Bahram" <sbahram at nc.rr.com>
To: "'Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.'" 
<speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 9:01 PM
Subject: RE: Linux and data storage?


> If I may humbly suggest?
>
> Fxp, or flash xp as I think it is...is a windows tool that allows someone 
> to
> connect to one ftp, then connect to the other ftp...and then say, FTP A,
> copy stuff to FTP B....then all you have to do is sit back and let the 
> data
> packets flow...it doesn't go through your system at all: so you could
> transfer information at any speed, only limited by the two ftp servers, 
> not
> by your own connection.
>
> *shrug* is there a linux equivalent to this tool/protocall?
>
> Take care,
> Sina
>
> No trees were destroyed in sending this message; however, a large number 
> of
> electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca 
> [mailto:speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca]
> On Behalf Of Chuck Hallenbeck
> Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 8:51 PM
> To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.
> Subject: Re: Linux and data storage?
>
> Karen,
>
> You have two bottlenecks, seems to me. One is your connection speed, the
> other is nettamer. You can use "tar" on your ISP's system to aggregate 
> those
> precious files into one archive, assuming you have the space, and then 
> move
> that archive somewhere. Nettamer could retrieve it with its ftp facility,
> but it might take forever over a dialup link.
>
> If you had a linux desktop, you could use an ftp client on your desktop,
> call it "system A", to move files from "system B" to "system C", assuming
> you had the necessary access permissions and such.
>
> Also, you could email stuff to yourself with attachments, although 
> nettamer
> is a little weird about attachments, and then you have filesize limits.
>
> Finally, if you had a Linux desktop and a high speed connection you would 
> be
> home free. Just grab all those files quickly with an FTP client, move them
> to your desktop, and burn them to a CD if you need to.
>
> My Linux system uses two 40 GB disks, one of which is used extensively to
> backup stuff on the other. Not exactly a raid system, but heavily 
> redundant.
> I do use CD backups too once in a blue moon.
>
> Your DOS desktop has limited HD storage. A Linux desktop would not. I have 
> a
> DOS partition of 500 MB on each of my two 40 GB hard discs, just in case,
> but have not booted into DOS in several years. For my own situation, I
> cannot imagine ever being able (psychologically) to return to DOS and
> Nettamer.
>
> Chuck
>
>
>
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