How I pay $1/month for 2 terabytes of storage: introducing Sia Slice(youngryan.com)
youngryan.com
How I pay $1/month for 2 terabytes of storage: introducing Sia Slice
https://youngryan.com/2019/10/introducing-sia-slice-my-absurdly-cheap-block-storage-solution/
8 comments
When I tried using Sia several months ago, it was a mess.
Here's my problems with Sia storage:
Time to setup and maintain contracts.
Confusion when it comes to type of contracts.
Big crypto files needed to connect with crypto network.
Unreliable availability of files.
Difficulty/complixity when trying to download your own files again when you want them.
I don't think Sia is a solution for the masses.
Here's my problems with Sia storage:
Time to setup and maintain contracts.
Confusion when it comes to type of contracts.
Big crypto files needed to connect with crypto network.
Unreliable availability of files.
Difficulty/complixity when trying to download your own files again when you want them.
I don't think Sia is a solution for the masses.
Sia has always positioned itself as a backend platform for services to build on. This is why they have invested so heavily in their API.
We agree with many of your points, and that's why we created Filebase[1]. We provide S3-compatible object storage at a fraction of the price and use Sia on our backend.
[1] https://filebase.com
We agree with many of your points, and that's why we created Filebase[1]. We provide S3-compatible object storage at a fraction of the price and use Sia on our backend.
[1] https://filebase.com
GSuite is even cheaper
It is?! How much do you pay for GSuite storage?
I assume they are referring to unlimited storage for £8-9/month
g suite has a limits on upload file size and amount per day
So the author is paying far far less than the cheapest storage solution. So some folks may be selling surplus storage or free hard drive space for less than it is worth, but as soon as a system like this becomes popular the price will reach a much higher equilibrium.
Edit: I found packs of LTO6 tapes on ebay that worked out to be $4.30/tb, so less than an order of magnitude.