The closest thing I was to that kind of set-up was at Granada Studios, where at the time they shot Coronation Street (British soap). But theoretically, those fibre lines could be any length and spread all across Hollywood. This was used locally at just one small production facility. These connected to fibre cards in the server and workstations. When I was working in that business we had a thing called a “Facilis Terrablock” which was a 4U, rack mounted box with 24 HDDs in the front and 4 I/O fibre ports in the back. That’s the system used by some of these high capacity storage devices that are used in (video/film) production pipelines. There is no internet involved and it’s super fast compared to any broadband connection. What I believe is referring to is a pure fibre data connection which goes from a fibre port in your workstation/server, through a pure fibre channel into the receiving port in another workstation/server. The fibre optic broadband you have is just that, your Wi-Fi or Ethernet by which you connect to the internet, using the regular internet protocols, through most likely copper wires until you get to the fibre part of the pipeline, it’s only as fast as the slowest part of the pipeline. Adobe creative cloud would be a great option if you just need to store things in the cloud and already have a adobe subscription.ĭamn I have a 50 / 50 Mbps fiber-optic fiber You only pay for storage and aws provides a generous free tier.Īnother option if you don’t need public internet access is adobe creative cloud. Unless you are managing your own physical server s3 is extremely low cost. If you need to access the files frequently than glacier isn’t a good option. It seems like you might be familiar with this considering you are talking about glacier but that is for backup. You can create a bucket in s3 and upload one of the files via the aws s3 gui to test. This eliminates any potential server limitations or load since the server is removed completely from the equation. The upload process to s3 can further be optimized by uploading files directly in the browser. With this feature you can create parallel uploads, pause and resume an object upload, and begin uploads before you know the total object size. After all parts of your object are uploaded, Amazon S3 then presents the data as a single object. Multipart Upload allows you to upload a single object as a set of parts. Multi-part upload will significantly reduce upload time for large files. With extremely large files it is always going to be slow to up/download on the web, there is no getting away from that.
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