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Re: [LUG] off topic :but what Linux distro could read and write to a mac computer's external back up?

 


Sent from my iPhone

On 11 Sep 2016, at 17:01, mr meowski <mr.meowski@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

>>> None.
>>> 
>>> Why make life complicated...
>>> 
>>> Insure Mac Book Air.
>>> 
>>> When it get stolen/destroyed, etc. claim on insurance, buy a new
>>> one, restore from backup and off you go.
>> 
>> 1+ this and use drop box pro. tried trusted . (1stilen from a train,
>> 1 sat on with phone between glass and keyboard) each time: walk to
>> store collect new laptop, open login with icloud account (email done)
>> log in to dropbox (files done) re-install apps from store & office365
>> .. good to go.
>> 
>> timemachine backups are overrated. but still useful for every day
>> file rollbacks.
> 
> There are so many things wrong with both of these answers I don't even
> know where to begin - I got halfway through writing a very over-long
> point by point rebuttal before realising how combative it sounded and
> deleted the lot. To summarise:
> 
> 1: You didn't read the question properly
> 2: You answered with the typical flippant IT Pro "oh just do this, that,
> that, that and then this, it's soooo easy LOL!" spool
> 3: Obviously neither of you have worked medical IT
> 4: You did read the part about her being poor right?
> 5: Insure it? Oh really? Thanks genius :/
> 6: "timemachine backups are overrated" - No offence Joseph, but that is
> the most stupid thing I have read all day. Seriously, what?
> 7: Macs have automatically versioned local files since Lion 10.7
> 
> I spent many years in medical IT and a large part of the role was
> specifically supporting hundreds of poor, young and very clever junior
> doctors who nonetheless weren't really much cop with computers (they
> have more important things to occupy their overstressed brains with).
> They nearly all used Macs. You do realise that as a med student she'll
> have private medical data on her laptop and what the ramifications of
> uploading that to iCloud/Dropbox/random service are right? Hint: not
> good for her career. Or the Trust she works for. Or the patients who's
> data is now being XKEYSCORED after being offshored in flagrant violation
> of the DPA. Unlike both of you, she and/or Eion will know this and
> FileVault will be enabled on the Mac and the TimeMachine backup (right
> Eion?).
> 
> Well, damn, even the short version of my reply has still not exactly
> come across nicely so just to clarify, I'm not attacking or even
> particularly criticising either of you - I respect you both as obviously
> really smart, Linux wielding fellow computer ninjas. Normally you both
> post excellent and informative stuff but in this particular case I rank
> both of your answers as "-1: uninformative/irrelevant/offtopic/plain
> damn wrong". Stick to what you know guys.
> 
> Eion asked a clear and simple straight-forward question (Linux and HFS+)
> and you both wandered off on either flippant or irrelevant tangents,
> some of which was catastrophically bad advice.
> 
> Yours,
> 
> A Medical Sysadmin (thankfully not any more though)
> 
> * seriously, both of you guys are great. I'm *really* not trying to pick
> a fight here. Feel free to absolutely school me on something like
> programming where I am a complete and hopeless moron compared to you!

boom! your seriously paranoid. 

ps time vault is a custom implementation of zfs. 

if her files are that sensitive, sure as fuck she'll be accessing them via an 
encrypted thin client. they sure as hell wont be on her metal. if they are ...fail. 

in the real world, a device is disposible, files and data are centrally and securly 
stored. 

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