Memopal: Linux Testers Wanted

by Mike Gunderloy - Aug. 08, 2008Comments (7)

 Memopal is an interesting startup. Their basic business is transparent online backup of your files, as you work with them. They do this through their own MGFS file system, which is designed to handle huge files in a distributed fashion. Already established on Windows and with a Mac beta version, they offer a variety of other features including file sharing that works with large files and a web interface for file management.

Now Memopal is getting ready to launch into Linux waters, and they're using a novel approach for recruiting beta testers. If you're interested, the way to sign up is to visit the Memopal wiki and edit it to include your own contact information. They promise to send out software around August 20, though it looks like you can email and get earlier access. Beta testers are promised a license on launch.

While it's nice to see this approach, and good to see cross-platform availability for the Memopal service, there's one thing that I don't see: any mention of what the licensing will be for the Linux bits. Given that they're a commercial company, I'm guessing that they won't be open source. Which leaves a question for the OStatic community: is there a truly open source distributed backup software that you're happy with? What would you recommend to your peers?



Kartik Subbarao uses OStatic to support Open Source, ask and answer questions and stay informed. What about you?



7 Comments
 

It seems that TimeMachine is using some kind of solid version control system at the back end. Someone should put together a version built on Subversion for this!

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It is interesting to see several people signing up for being beta testers. Memopal better make their licensing strategy known soon, otherwise I'm sure a lot of the testers will be pretty pissed if the product is commercially licensed alone.

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Good ol' rsync should do the trick. Of course, you can use tar (option 'j' to bzip2 the files is always good) once you decide what you need to move over, or if you are moving binary files. GUIs are for wimps!

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For all online backup, file sharing and storage related info, I recommend this website:

http://www.BackupReview.info

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how cannot believe it....it's not an open source project.....are they going to pay? I don't think so!

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you're right.....it's not an open source project...why testing for free?!?

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I think that being a service, this can't be open source 'cause infrastructure and servers costing.

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