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Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi
Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi





promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi
  1. #Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi serial#
  2. #Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi update#
  3. #Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi pro#

That's why the Drobo arrays are so popular with civilians. To be fair to Promise, all RAID boxes are a pain to stand up. NAS boxes - such as the Iomega Ix4 200d - give a much smoother user experience using the defaults.

promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi

16 GB of RAM is going in later today and that should help.īut it's clear that the RAID OOTB experience isn't up to Apple standards. The 4 GB MacBook Air/128 GB SSD combo easily handles that - even with over a GB of swap files - so here I am.ĭespite these hiccups I expect the iMac/Thunderbolt/Promise RAID will meet my requirements and give me better performance than the 5 year old Mac Pro. Quitting it restored system performance, but I need to have a browser open for research while I write. With just a dozen Safari browser tabs, Mail, the RAID utility and the Mac activity monitor open, I saw frequent slowdowns and almost 8 GB of swap files. The stock 4 GB iMac is a different story. Swap files rarely exceeded a few hundred megabytes, even after 2 weeks of heavy use.

#Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi pro#

My old box was a 2006 Mac Pro with 12 GB of RAM, a sweet 10k Velociraptor, a Radeon 5770 video card and a 2 drive RAID 0 for video files. Based on the 7 hours/72% complete so far, I'd say it will take almost exactly 10 hours - with the Pegasus doing nothing else all day! A "Very Important Please Read!!" message warns this can take up to 10 hours. The box needs to initialize and synchronize the 4 TB of raw Raid 5 capacity. Once the updates were in the iMac could see the Pegasus RAID.

#Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi serial#

In the meantime Migration Assistant moved my old accounts, apps, documents and settings to the new system disk - although it lost my Final Cut Studio serial number. The updates went pretty fast, but needing them took some shine off the "factory fresh" iMac.

#Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi update#

Once the update completed it still needed another update to support the Thunderbolt array. Must have been in the warehouse for a while. Turns out that the iMac needed an update to 10.6.8, the only version of OS X that supports the Promise array, along with a another 500 MB of other updates. The gorgeous 27" display came up, but I couldn't see my new array. The wireless keyboard and Magic trackpad are neatly packaged.Īfter plugging in the power cable, MS Natural Elite keyboard, Logitech Trackman Wheel (never had much luck with wireless kit), LaCie Rugged FW800 drive (a clone of my former system disk) Promise Pegasus R4 RAID, Apple 23" Cinema Display and a Viewsonic 20" display, I hit the power button. The new iMac has a fine unboxing experience. Woo-hoo! How great is it? Here's a hint: I'm writing this on a Core Duo 2. Xmas in July: brand new quadcore I7 Sandy Bridge 3.4 GHz 27.5" iMac with dual Thunderbolt ports and new Thunderbolt storage array. We review Apple's M1 Ultra-powered Mac StudioĬan digital dollars be as anonymous as cash? Ukrainian developers share stories from the war zone When the boss gets angry at employees' Teams habits







Promise pegasus r4 backup via wifi