1-4 of 4 Answers
I haven't tested this yet, but I know I can make a usb target device with a raspberry pi 0(probably with other devices too, but it's a common pi0 project. I'm thinking if I make a 256GB device on my server and point the pi0 to it over the network I should be able to present this storage device to the sync module from the pi0 and format with the correct file system. Again, I've not tried it, but I'm sure the sync module wouldn't know the difference. I have created a usb device with a pi0 before and it worked with my computer like any other flash drive. Once this is accomplished, I should be able to write a script to run on a cron job (scheduled task for win folks) and check the space on my virtual flash drive. Set something like a 50% capacity threshold so when that is exceeded, the script will pause all read/write operations to the flash drive partition, check the date of every file and move the oldest half (25% of the capacity or 64GB)onto another partition within the server, then delete them from the flash drive partition, resume any operations that were occuring before this process (assuming it wasn't a read on a file older than the halfway point which should just fail on the requesting end without any other issue, there's no reason for it to be performing writes on files older than half the total files) and the sync module shouldn't know anything happened except half its files are now gone and it has twice the storage. This may cause issues depending on how the sync module indexes these files, but I don't expect any problems making this work. and then i'll have 10 or so Terabytes of space available, or(according to Blink's file size estimate in the FAQ) roughly 100 million seconds of 1080p video recording space. Which is about 3.2 years solid of video and way more than I'll ever need. It just would've been easy for Amazon to add so much more functionality for power users, but they haven't put enough effort in the software, nor have they offered much to advanced users. Your question was not answered correctly by blink and it should be as easy as them adding a field in the sync module 2 settings for a local NAS address for the videos to be stored instead of a flash drive. Or they could release a device that's basically what I'm building and call it an alternative storage option allowing you to connect that USB A to your computer's/server's/SoC computer connected to a network share or a storage bucket....ok, there it is. They want you to pay a subscription to be able to stick this data in the cloud instead of offering DIY. I think I'll take it a step further and have this data also backed up to the cloud. Still won't be as fast loading as their cloud option, but I'm betting the USB loading speed is purposefully worse than in needs to be in order to incentive people into buying their subscription. Hope this helps someone overcome a silly limitation imposed by Blink.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I haven't tested this yet, but I know I can make a usb target device with a raspberry pi 0(probably with other devices too, but it's a common pi0 project. I'm thinking if I make a 256GB device on my server and point the pi0 to it over the network I should be able to present this storage device to the sync module from the pi0 and format with the correct file system. Again, I've not tried it, but I'm sure the sync module wouldn't know the difference. I have created a usb device with a pi0 before and it worked with my computer like any other flash drive. Once this is accomplished, I should be able to write a script to run on a cron job (scheduled task for win folks) and check the space on my virtual flash drive. Set something like a 50% capacity threshold so when that is exceeded, the script will pause all read/write operations to the flash drive partition, check the date of every file and move the oldest half (25% of the capacity or 64GB)onto another partition within the server, then delete them from the flash drive partition, resume any operations that were occuring before this process (assuming it wasn't a read on a file older than the halfway point which should just fail on the requesting end without any other issue, there's no reason for it to be performing writes on files older than half the total files) and the sync module shouldn't know anything happened except half its files are now gone and it has twice the storage. This may cause issues depending on how the sync module indexes these files, but I don't expect any problems making this work. and then i'll have 10 or so Terabytes of space available, or(according to Blink's file size estimate in the FAQ) roughly 100 million seconds of 1080p video recording space. Which is about 3.2 years solid of video and way more than I'll ever need. It just would've been easy for Amazon to add so much more functionality for power users, but they haven't put enough effort in the software, nor have they offered much to advanced users. Your question was not answered correctly by blink and it should be as easy as them adding a field in the sync module 2 settings for a local NAS address for the videos to be stored instead of a flash drive. Or they could release a device that's basically what I'm building and call it an alternative storage option allowing you to connect that USB A to your computer's/server's/SoC computer connected to a network share or a storage bucket....ok, there it is. They want you to pay a subscription to be able to stick this data in the cloud instead of offering DIY. I think I'll take it a step further and have this data also backed up to the cloud. Still won't be as fast loading as their cloud option, but I'm betting the USB loading speed is purposefully worse than in needs to be in order to incentive people into buying their subscription. Hope this helps someone stick it to Amazon. /rant_over
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I haven't tested this yet, but I know I can make a usb target device with a raspberry pi 0(probably with other devices too, but it's a common pi0 project. I'm thinking if I make a 256GB device on my server and point the pi0 to it over the network I should be able to present this storage device to the sync module from the pi0 and format with the correct file system. Again, I've not tried it, but I'm sure the sync module wouldn't know the difference. I have created a usb device with a pi0 before and it worked with my computer like any other flash drive. Once this is accomplished, I should be able to write a script to run on a cron job (scheduled task for win folks) and check the space on my virtual flash drive. Set something like a 50% capacity threshold so when that is exceeded, the script will pause all read/write operations to the flash drive partition, check the date of every file and move the oldest half (25% of the capacity or 64GB)onto another partition within the server, then delete them from the flash drive partition, resume any operations that were occuring before this process (assuming it wasn't a read on a file older than the halfway point which should just fail on the requesting end without any other issue, there's no reason for it to be performing writes on files older than half the total files) and the sync module shouldn't know anything happened except half its files are now gone and it has twice the storage. This may cause issues depending on how the sync module indexes these files, but I don't expect any problems making this work. and then i'll have 10 or so Terabytes of space available, or(according to Blink's file size estimate in the FAQ) roughly 100 million seconds of 1080p video recording space. Which is about 3.2 years solid of video and way more than I'll ever need. It just would've been easy for Amazon to add so much more functionality for power users, but they haven't put enough effort in the software, nor have they offered much to advanced users. Your question was not answered correctly by blink and it should be as easy as them adding a field in the sync module 2 settings for a local NAS address for the videos to be stored instead of a flash drive. Or they could release a device that's basically what I'm building and call it an alternative storage option allowing you to connect that USB A to your computer's/server's/SoC computer connected to a network share or a storage bucket....ok, there it is. They want you to pay a subscription to be able to stick this data in the cloud instead of offering DIY. I think I'll take it a step further and have this data also backed up to the cloud. Still won't be as fast loading as their cloud option, but I'm betting the USB loading speed is purposefully worse than in needs to be in order to incentive people into buying their subscription. Hope this helps someone overcome this stupid limitation and at least in some small way, stick it to Amazon. /rant_over
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Hi there, Yes, the sync module 2 offers a USB Slot where you can connect a USB Flash drive for local storage.
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