MediaFire Minion #1: Hey, I just got told by management we don’t take PayPal any more.
MediaFire Minion #2: So hang on – we have a whole bunch of subscribers going with that. What happens to their data?
MediaFire Minion #1: I dunno, we’ll just have to tell them to change payment or we cut them back to the free storage deal.
MediaFire Minion #2: So, we send out an email about this? I don’t have the time to set up a mail out. I’ve got the pad app on my plan.
MediaFire Minion #1: Naah we’ll just put up a notice saying that MF don’t take PayPal any more and hope they log in before their next payment falls due.
PayPal: Dear Ellard, your scheduled payment to MediaFire was unable to be processed. Please contact the vendor to arrange alternate payment.
Me: What in holy fuck just happened to 2TB of backup?
There are still people out there who use some ‘cloud’ or other as their primary backup, egged on by ‘technology pundits’ that think any new idea is good idea. This hubris leads to entertaining falls when the pundit has a meltdown. For me MediaFire was there as a media source and a third stage in case two hard drives exploded simultaneously or an atom bomb hit Surry Hills. I’ve got it all on a RAID and I can go elsewhere – if I can find a place that doesn’t hand out my password over the phone like Apple (seriously, WTF).
I am supported in this view by the GroundHog. Not always a good sign.

“It’s not the post office’s fault when they’re advertising for people to post stolen goods and keeping copies at the office or something like that, sometimes thoughts get jumbled up in my – look it’s a cat!”
The best part of the MegaUpload court case was the reveal that their servers were set up in two hotel rooms in Hong Kong. I’m sure that MediaFire at least has an office, but it’s not much use when a squabble with PayPal brings a decision to axe my account and not make damn sure I hear about it repeatedly.
Do I go with Big Advertising? Maybe The Blob? Or The Ol’ Grey Mare?
I am more inclined to go with a few more of these as they have Blue LEDs and that is a sign of extra quality.


Laser etch in stone tablets – at least they won’t effing crash, unless you drop them from a great height.
And I keep reading articles about how we’re all supposed to be post-RAID nowadays… arf! RAID5/6 is so passè. I want a dirty great big 10TB disk.. that way, when it one day inevitably dies, it takes *everything* with it! Win Win!
/grumbles in only the way someone responsible for large amounts of storage possibly can/
I bought a D-Link DNS-320 ShareCenter for about 100 bucks, does all the same things as the Home NAS(server?) as the one you listed above and obviously cheaper.
Mine is limited to 2 gig though since I set RAID up on it. So unless both drives go at once, my precious 1 million photos and 100,000 songs that I will never have time to look at or listen to – will be around until I die and my children steal the HD’s and store video games on them..or something like that.