Qion
Uber Nothing
Well, how do you guys think it works?
Main problems I forsee:
1. What happens to those of us with laptops who enjoy disconnecting from external drives when we visit the café or generally move about? If you were to, per se, download an "I'm a Mac." commericial, watch it, and delete it 5 minutes later, would Time Machine still access it? Would Time Machine work at all?
2. What happens when you are continuously running Time Machine for months on end, and constantly create/delete large files? How would it ever begin to account for the film industry without having gigantic ammounts of storage to feed into?
3. If you were to, for whatever reason, disconnect from a volume, do a lot of work, and reconnect to that volume, would there be a large pause while Time Machine "automatically" updated?
My personal opinion is that Time Machine will somehow access "deleted" files from exactly where they were deleted. As some of us know, when you erase something, it doesn't actually go away until something else fills the same sector of space. This would run into problems, however, with conspiracy theorists and their zeroing and people who do not own 1TB hard disks.
I guess we're just stuck speculating...
(Oh, and on a completely unrelated tangent, why do you think Steve had two iSights connected to his computer(s)? Back-up system maybe?)
Main problems I forsee:
1. What happens to those of us with laptops who enjoy disconnecting from external drives when we visit the café or generally move about? If you were to, per se, download an "I'm a Mac." commericial, watch it, and delete it 5 minutes later, would Time Machine still access it? Would Time Machine work at all?
2. What happens when you are continuously running Time Machine for months on end, and constantly create/delete large files? How would it ever begin to account for the film industry without having gigantic ammounts of storage to feed into?
3. If you were to, for whatever reason, disconnect from a volume, do a lot of work, and reconnect to that volume, would there be a large pause while Time Machine "automatically" updated?
My personal opinion is that Time Machine will somehow access "deleted" files from exactly where they were deleted. As some of us know, when you erase something, it doesn't actually go away until something else fills the same sector of space. This would run into problems, however, with conspiracy theorists and their zeroing and people who do not own 1TB hard disks.
I guess we're just stuck speculating...
(Oh, and on a completely unrelated tangent, why do you think Steve had two iSights connected to his computer(s)? Back-up system maybe?)