this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2023
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[–] [email protected] 10 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I hate Google but realistically, the chance of Google losing data is definitely higher than the chance of me losing data in my NAS. That is if either one is the sole copy of said data. Again, realistically, Google Drive, for most people, is the storage. People trust (and for good reason) that Google will take care about backup (all the client-side problems that might arise being out of bound for most people's comprehension). I don't blame users using GD as a sole storage in that regard. Sure, they could've done better, but if they're paying for it(and even if they're not), it should be expected that the data is available without no (significant) downtime.

I use Nextcloud btw.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I have a few questions about a home NAS, if you don’t mind. I see a lot of love for both Synology and NextCloud. Which do you prefer? Also, do you think it’s worth having NextCloud on a cloud machine? How do you access your NextCloud instance outside your home network?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

Synology > Nextcloud on VPS(I assume what cloud machine is that you are talking about) imo. Nextcloud is quite resource intensive. You won't be happy with just $10/m VPS, that is aside from obvious storage size problem.

Synology is expensive but reliable. Does one job well but somewhat limited. Synology and Nextcloud have different values and strong points. You'll be happy if all you do is just file sharing with both options, synology being easier of course.

I use my own machine at home to run Nextcloud among other various selfhost stuff. It works flawlessly. After the initial setup, almost no tinkering is necessary. I just reverse proxy Nextcloud so there's no issue with accessing but if you can't/don't want to, you can use something like Zerotier or Tailscale. Personally recently migrated to Tailscale as it's just more user friendly.