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- Hey, it's me Destin.
Welcome back to Smarter Every Day.
There's a lot of stuff that goes
into making this YouTube channel
and some of it's more complicated than others
and there's a lot of behind the scenes stuff
that you don't see.
This is one of those types of things.
I wanted to learn some stuff and I called in an expert
and he happens to be a personality here on YouTube.
His name is Linus Sebastian from Linus Tech Tips.
So the thing you might not realize about Smarter Every Day
is I have a problem and it's because
of this thing right here.
So as you know this is the V2511 high speed camera.
This is the workhorse of how I do slow motion video
on the channel.
But the problem is you got two types of memory
on this camera.
You have volatile memory on the camera.
Think of it like RAM on your computer
so if you shoot something you got a certain amount
of RAM that can save on this local camera
and if you ever lose power, you're done.
There's non-volatile memory on top
and this persists if you lose power, right.
So this is 512 gigabytes of memory
but the problem is after every shoot
I have to do something with this,
so I have a problem.
Let me show you what I did to try to fix this problem.
So about, I don't know,
a year ago,
no, six months ago I sent this particular, come on.
Come on, come on over here.
About six months ago I sent this tweet out
to a guy named Linus Sebastian.
He does this thing where he puts,
I don't know,
servers in people's houses and I called him here.
So Linus, I need your help, buddy.
This is pretty serious.
- I'm here.
All right, yeah this is really serious.
This is bad.
- First let me show you my hard drives.
Can I show you this?
- Yeah, okay. - Okay, let me get the
hard drives and show it to you.
- I don't know if I can handle this.
(Sebastian laughing)
- I'm sure you've seen people with more than this, right?
- No, I think this is even more than Justine had.
- Okay, so this is not all of it, there's more.
Do you want me to just stick with this?
- No, I wanna see,
bring on the carnage.
- Okay, let me go get the old stuff.
- So let's start doing some inventory here, I guess.
434 gig, so we're at two and a half terabytes.
That's a one terabyte.
Three and a half.
- So this is the old stuff.
I call this the deep vault.
- Five and a half.
This is an eight terabyte drive.
- Yeah, it is. - And it's
literally ducked taped to two other drives.
- That's how I roll, man.
It's pretty serious.
And so, I literally go to the spreadsheet,
look at this.
So I have an entire spreadsheet.
- Go have a look at this.
- So what I do is I just come in here,
I Control + F and I'll say,
like, Mars rover,
and so if I go to
hard drive A27,
so go find A27.
(Sebastian laughing)
This is how it works, man.
- [Sebastian] Oh, God.
- [Destin] So A26.
21, okay so somebody's moved A27.
(Sebastian laughing)
- [Sebastian] So we're finding a flaw
in the system already here.
- We're hosed, we're looking for A27.
So A27 is not where it's supposed to be.
So you see my problem, right.
So these aren't even
indexed yet. - We all see
your problem.
- [Destin] These are--
- [Sebastian] (screaming) You just dropped it.
- [Destin] Yeah, I did.
But it was on carpet so we're good.
So it was my understanding
you shipped a 45 Drive server here.
- Yeah. - And we're gonna
install it and it's gonna make this problem go away.
- It might not be enough.
- Seriously?
- Have you added up the capacity of this?
- I have not, no.
- 'Cause I'm at like 25 terabytes here already.
- Yeah. - I shipped
you a 160 terabytes server.
So here's the thing,
you could make the argument that our data hoarding
really doesn't make a ton of sense
because we could just grab the necessary footage
from a YouTube upload,
splice it into our new video when we wanna refer
back to it and bippity boppity,
off to the races.
Now, with Destin,
his case was a really interesting one for me
because he actually does not have the luxury
of being able to go back to the previous video
and grab it without making any very significant compromises,
because this kind of high speed footage
the data rates are so incredible and the amount
of runtime for what could be a very,
very short clip wouldn't make sense
to upload in the YouTube video at all.
So he's gotta pick and choose his battles.
So he's throwing out a ton of frames
whenever he's showing you,
whether it's a hummingbird's wings in realtime,
he's throwing out a ton of data in the actual video
that you guys watch,
except for the small segments that he decides to show you.
So everything else here could be necessary
if you ever wanted to go back and look at something
in more detail.
So
we gotta get this server rolled out.
- You're genuinely worried, aren't you?
- Yeah.
- My tweet said you would fix my problem, dude.
- Wait, your tweet--
- Help me Linus that you're my
only hope. - Your tweet
says I'll fix the problem so now
it's my liability if it doesn't,
is that right?
So you put words in my mouth.
- You never actually replied to this.
- No, I didn't.
- You don't even care.
You don't even watch Smarter Every Day.
Let's just fix my problem,
I don't care.
- [Sebastian] All right, so let's come over here.
So Destin was--
- [Destin] Yeah, we installed it.
- [Sebastian] Yeah.
- [Destin] Any more light always is good.
The nice yellow light.
- Oh God, he just tripped over
the drives. - Sorry.
It was only like 20 terabytes or whatever.
- So this is great.
We actually had this server shipped down here.
It must've been like--
- [Destin] It's a while back.
- Two months ago or something like that.
It took me a long time to get down here.
I'm sorry, because clearly the problem is,
I would've gotten on the next plane--
- [Sebastian] It's a big deal,
dude. - If I'd known it was
this bad. - Yeah.
- Now, have you installed the drives in here yet?
- [Destin] No, I haven't.
- And that's why this drill is here.
- [Destin] Yeah, we're gonna take this out.
- Undo them out, got it.
(machine drilling)
- [Destin] Cool.
- Look at that.
(cover banging)
(Destin laughing)
- [Destin] Yeah.
- I love this video so far.
- [Destin] Are you being sarcastic?
- The shenanigans are real.
No, I love it.
This is great.
So Seagate actually shipped you 12 terabyte
instead of 10 terabyte drives,
which is what I thought they had sent you.
- Okay.
- So that's another 30 terabytes of raw capacity.
- You just rip them open like that?
- This is good. Yeah, yeah.
You just kind of shuck them.
- Like corn?
- Yeah. Yeah, yeah, basically.
- I think you think I'm joking
but I actually don't know all this stuff.
- So this is just a friction mount here on the side.
- It's a spring?
- [Sebastian] But give it a little more pressure
than you're comfortable with.
There you go.
- That's it? - That's all there is to it.
- So this is easy.
- This is easy.
So the way that RAID works is it's writing the true data
and it's also writing what are known as parity bits.
So if I had,
let's focus on these four drives right here.
I'm running this in,
let's say, a RAID 5.
- Okay.
- That means that for every three pieces of real data,
and this is a oversimplification for the sake
of it being easier to understand,
I'm writing a parity bit that is,
think of it as kind of like an algebraic expression
where this parity bit is on the other side
of the equal sign of these three.
- Got it.
- So if I were to lose any one of these four things
I can rebuild the other one.
- By resolving the equation.
- It's a way of rebuilding what you had lost, right.
- [Destin] Right.
- But we are not running parity
in a conventional sense here.
So we're using a software called Unraid
that rather than striping the parity bits
so that they exist across multiple drives
it actually uses an entire single drive,
or two drives if you prefer to be able
to lose two drives to write all of the parity bits to.
So that comes with some advantages and disadvantages.
The disadvantage is that it's meant mostly
for archival storage.
It's not as fast to write to.
- Okay.
- But the advantage is that in the event
that you set it up with a single parity drive
and you lose three drives,
let's say your house floods or something
and it floods up to here,
all this data is still good.
- Okay.
- Whereas if you had the parity bits striped,
if you lose more than your threshold,
all the data is gone.
- I see.
So let's say just for sake of easy numbers,
let's say they were 100 terabytes here,
which there's more than that,
but let's say there were a 100 terabytes worth
of hard drive space,
that's not how much server space I'm gonna have?
- Nope.
- How much will I have?
- You would have anywhere from 80 to 90,
depending on what you prefer.
- And so that other part is just for the parity bits?
- That's right.
- This is a big deal for me man, I mean.
- No, it's great.
You need it more than anyone else we've deployed one
of these to so far, I think.
- Are you serious?
- Yeah.
- It feels like it.
- This is a dire situation.
- [Destin] This is another video for you
but this is like a really significant,
I'm not gonna say emotional,
but there's a lot of stress tied up in this.
A lot of my life has been protecting this
and I've got some in like a safety deposit box.
How long's it gonna take to slurp all the data?
- [Sebastian] A long time.
- [Destin] Really?
- You've got a big,
big data hoarder problem here.
(Sebastian laughing)
- [Destin] This isn't data hoarding.
(Sebastian laughing)
- There it is.
(Sebastian shouting with excitement)
- [Destin] Did it work?
- Oh, yeah.
We can do this later but I just wanted
to make sure all the drives are showing up.
Three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
nine, 10, 11, 12, 13, pal, perfect.
- [Destin] Is it good?
- And the SSDs are here too.
- [Destin] Is it good enough to high five?
Okay, just making sure.
They're all formatting, wow.
You can hear them all clicking.
- [Sebastian] Yeah, they're going.
- This is nothing.
You do this all the time.
You don't care about this at all.
- [Sebastian] Oh no, I think it's cool.
I think it's cool.
I'm sharing your cool experience.
(Destin laughing)
- Okay, so once we set up our RAID here,
even in the event that we actually did lose more
than two drives,
because it's on RAID the only data you lose
is the data on the drive that physically failed.
So that's cool.
And in addition to that,
because we're using Ironwolf Pro drives
they come with a five year warranty
and they come with a data recovery warranty.
- Thank you. I appreciate it.
- Oh, you're very welcome. - This is a big deal.
This is Linus from Linus Tech Tips.
They do great videos like they hooked me up here.
This is a big deal.
Thank you for that.
- My pleasure. - And your partners
were 45 Drives and Seagate.
- And Unraid.
- And Unraid.
So thank you to you three companies that did that,
really appreciate it.
Go subscribe to Linus.
Linus does a bunch of,
like everything, right?
Everything from reviewing keyboards
to like everything. - Pretty much.
- You do everything. - To touring
the world's only commercial quantum
computer manufacturing facility.
- Really?
- Yeah, we did that.
- Go check his stuff out, it's amazing.
I like your channel.
- Thank you.
- Yeah, I've watched your channel for a long time.
Big thanks to Linus for coming out to Alabama.
This was a huge problem I had,
this data storage issue.
Thanks to Linus for working with these companies,
his contacts, not mine.
You had 45 Drives who made the enclosure and the server,
Seagate who donated the hard drives
and Unraid is running the software on that server.
I'm very thankful and I'm also interested
in seeing how he does in the next video.
I'm gonna do something kind of interesting,
I'm gonna pluck Linus out of his RGB Keyboard
gamer system, sandals over socks kind of world
and I'm gonna introduce him to this man.
- I'm Luke Talley and at this time in 1969
I was a senior social engineer at IBM in Huntsville.
- Luke Talley is an amazing individual
and I want to just juxtapose Linus who's up
on all the new tech with Luke who had to figure
out how to make memory for computers.
I want to put those two together and just see what happens?
And it is fascinating.
I hope this video that you just watched
earned your subscription here to Smarter Every Day,
but more importantly,
I hope you will stick around and subscribe
and ring the bell so that you can see that next video.
Because Linus and Luke both teaching me
really interesting things about one
of the most important computers ever built by human hands
is a fascinating trip.
We went to the US Space and Rocket Center.
All that's in the next video so please consider subscribing
if you're into that sort of thing.
If not, that's no big deal.
Anyway, I hope you enjoy this.
I'm Destin, you're getting smarter every day.
Have a good one.
Thanks Linus, bye.
Let me show you a trick.
This is a trick I learned about computers.
- Yeah.
- So I have a pen and paper
and sometimes I write
things down. - There we go.
No, I remember the IP.
(Sebastian laughing)
This is a better way.