First 100km On The Clock

We took the car out for a ride in the appallingly dismal Dutch summer weather yesterday, driving to Leiden to visit Naturalis.

We’ve now passed 100 km at the end of our first week of ownership and, I must say, the Sharan is proving to be a very pleasant car to drive.

As suspected, although I can play Spotify from my Nexus One over the car’s speaker system, I can only play, stop, rewind and fast-forward. I can’t even see the name of the track that is playing, or who it is by. Still, being able to listen to Spotify in the car at all still has huge novelty value for me, so I’m happy.

Here, Eloïse poses next to the skeleton of a camarasaurus.

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New Car + Android Phone + Bluetooth A2DP = Spotify While Driving

I’d already paired my phone with our new car on the day we bought it, for the purpose of conducting phone calls. Today, I decided to see whether the car and the phone would team up to allow the distribution of audio. They did. So far so good.

But would it really allow me to play from the Spotify client? The surprising answer — surprising to me, anyway — is yes. Thanks to A2DP, I was able to listen to Spotify through the car speakers. I forgot to check whether I could control the Spotify client in any meaningful way from the car’s controls, but I very much doubt it. If I can control it at all, I’m sure it will be no more than play, stop, rewind and fast-forward.

Of course, this requires a 3G data connection, which I have, but that would get expensive very quickly over the border. For local driving, however, it’ll be a very useful feature. Since our new car doesn’t even have a CD player, having the ability to stream from Spotify provides a necessary alternative.

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Some Call It The Cupboard Under The Stairs…

..but to me, it’s the data centre.

Yes, that’s dust in the grille of one of the NAS units and yes, it’s embarrassing. I will rectify the situation.

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Barry, The Back-Ups Are Sorted

Last week, I took receipt of our third NAS. Like the two that went before it, it’s a Netgear ReadyNAS, this time a Pro 6 with 18 Tb of storage, model number RNDP6630-200EUS.

The first thing I did was upgrade the unit from 1 Gb of RAM to 8 Gb. Whilst Netgear doesn’t endorse the use of third-party memory modules, one user on Netgear’s user forums had reported success with a particular model of DIMM manufactured by Patriot, so, unable to locate any of that type in the Netherlands, I ordered a couple of sticks of it from Ireland.

After putting the unit through a good 15 hours of memory checks with the new RAM, I installed the NAS in the server cupboard, booted it normally and performed basic configuration of the box.

The unit was now ready to put into use, so I set about putting our data on the box. It is now serving home directories and music.

The previous NAS, a Pro Business Edition with 12 Tb of storage (RNDP6620-100EUS), is for back-ups only. All of my smaller storage devices had filled up several months earlier — shit, it might have even been a year — and so we had not had proper back-ups of some (not all) of our data for some time. Inexcusable, I know, but I had been searching for suitable back-up systems, only to ultimately reach the conclusion that the most convenient solution would be to purchase yet another NAS. It’s not a cheap solution by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s very effective, at least.

Our original NAS, a trusty old NV+ with just 4 Tb of storage (RNDP4410), continues unerringly in its task of recording and playing back TV programmes for our MythTV DVR. It could be retired at this point, however.

The minimum number of disc platters spinning at any one time in the house has now risen to an alarming 19, and even that applies only when we’re away. When we’re in residence, at least a score of discs are humming away at various locations around the house, most of them hidden away and inaudible. That last detail is no small luxury with the Seagate ST33000650NS drives that came with the new Pro 6. They’ve unbelievably noisy and it would be unworkable to have any unit that contained them situated in a room of the house that was ever occupied.

A few more NAS boxes and we can get rid of central-heating. Seriously, the server cupboard downstairs is generating a fair bit of heat now. It’s not at a dangerous level, but it is getting to the point that I wouldn’t want to add much more equipment in there. Another problem is that I’m running out of sockets to patch more equipment through the UPS.

Anyway, back-ups are in full flow again now. Should we suffer a double RAID failure on the main NAS, we’ll have a full copy of the data on a second RAIDed device. The only thing we’re missing now is a full off-site back-up. Ideally, I would buy another ReadyNAS and situate it at a friend’s house, preferably on a different continent, but that’s once again an expensive solution and requires a knowledgeable friend with lots of bandwidth to spare and a generous disposition. I actually know a few such people, but I’m not yet convinced that I need to spend the cash.

Thanks to Barry Mossman for possessing both the tenacity and temerity to persistently nag me to get my ailing back-ups sorted out.

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Guten Tag, Sharan (Or Should I Say Buenos Dias?)

Lucas lends a hand with the unveiling of the new car in the showroom.

And, with the new car parked outside, sliding doors and a storage system for Eloïse’s diverse stuff manage to compensate somewhat for the loss of her old friend, the A6.

Get the full story.

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