m021478

Q: Paying for temporary use of a crazy fast upload connection?

I'd like to take advantage of Amazon.com's Unlimited Photo Storage for Prime members to backup my extensive photo digital photo collection. I have roughly 4.5TB of RAW/PSD/TIFF photos I'd like to upload, but that would take an eternity on my 20Mbps upload connection. Even if I wanted to dedicate a couple months to doing it, I'd be hampered by constant buffering issues for all of my other bandwidth heavy services (i.e. streaming via Netflix or Apple TV, Dropcam cloud recording, Dropbox, etc.).

 

Does anyone know of a way that I could somehow rent a ridiculously fast upload connection for a couple of days/weeks to up the 4.5TB of RAW photos I'd like to backup on Amazon? Is there some clever server/seedbox/mac-minicolo/etc. approach to this issue that might be the solution I'm looking for? Piggy-backing on a starbucks or apple store connection won't cut it for 4.5TB.

 

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated... Thanks!

Posted on Aug 2, 2015 4:41 PM

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Q: Paying for temporary use of a crazy fast upload connection?

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  • Helpful answers

  • by rkaufmann87,

    rkaufmann87 rkaufmann87 Aug 2, 2015 4:44 PM in response to m021478
    Level 9 (58,431 points)
    Photos for Mac
    Aug 2, 2015 4:44 PM in response to m021478

    Ask your ISP to upgrade then cancel when you are done.

  • by m021478,

    m021478 m021478 Aug 2, 2015 10:21 PM in response to rkaufmann87
    Level 1 (5 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 2, 2015 10:21 PM in response to rkaufmann87

    I'm using the fastest connection my ISP provides (Time Warner's 300/20 Mbps service). It's not going to cut it for this task. There must be some other way!

  • by babowa,

    babowa babowa Aug 2, 2015 10:36 PM in response to m021478
    Level 7 (32,009 points)
    iPad
    Aug 2, 2015 10:36 PM in response to m021478

    How about using external hard drive(s) instead?

  • by m021478,

    m021478 m021478 Aug 2, 2015 10:41 PM in response to babowa
    Level 1 (5 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 2, 2015 10:41 PM in response to babowa

    I also do that. And I keep backup drives off-site. This is about redundancy, as well as trying to take full advantage of a service offered to prime members, which I'm already paying for. Might as well get the most bang for my buck! Plus, the Amazon Photos app makes these images accessible via my iOS device, which is a pretty cool bonus!

  • by babowa,

    babowa babowa Aug 2, 2015 10:57 PM in response to m021478
    Level 7 (32,009 points)
    iPad
    Aug 2, 2015 10:57 PM in response to m021478

    Well, it was a thought...... unfortunately, I have no suggestions for your upload speed problem.

  • by woodmeister50,

    woodmeister50 woodmeister50 Aug 3, 2015 3:42 AM in response to m021478
    Level 5 (5,510 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 3, 2015 3:42 AM in response to m021478

    Any network source available to the home will all have limited upload bandwidth.

    The limitation is the technology that is available routed to your location.

     

    Now, if you want to spend 10's of thousands of dollars to get dedicated fiber links

    run to you home (if it is even available) and the thousands of dollars for the terminal equipment,

    you might be able to do what you want.  Ultimately you would still be limited by how fast

    you can get data off your drives.

  • by m021478,

    m021478 m021478 Aug 3, 2015 9:54 AM in response to woodmeister50
    Level 1 (5 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 3, 2015 9:54 AM in response to woodmeister50

    I think you guys are missing the point.

     

    I'm trying to find a service that temporarily 'rents' super high speed broadband (not necessarily in my home). Either a service like this exists, or it doesn't. Googling didn't turn up anything so I figured I'd ask to see if anyone knew of any such service.

     

    Obviously paying tens of thousands of dollars for dedicated fiber optics run to my home isn't quite what I meant.

  • by UGADog,

    UGADog UGADog Aug 3, 2015 10:31 AM in response to m021478
    Level 4 (1,902 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 3, 2015 10:31 AM in response to m021478

    I don't think such an upload service exists.  Interesting idea though.  Even if it did exist, I'm pretty sure Amazon would throttle the upload to their system.  Why do you think they make it free?  They are not going to take 4.5TB from everyone in a day.  They make it free and unlimited because they know you can't upload all that data without a lot of system commitment on your part so you have to really want it.  They are not going to make doing what you are trying to do easy.  My speculation.

  • by m021478,

    m021478 m021478 Aug 3, 2015 10:37 AM in response to UGADog
    Level 1 (5 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 3, 2015 10:37 AM in response to UGADog

    You're probably right. Maybe we'll get lucky and someone reading this thread will be from Kansas City and have a Google Fiber connection (and its 1000Mbps upload connection), so they could help us put it to the test!

     

    Hey someone in Kansas City... Can I rent your broadband for a little while to upload some photos?

  • by kmillard2,

    kmillard2 kmillard2 Aug 8, 2016 6:17 AM in response to m021478
    Level 1 (4 points)
    Aug 8, 2016 6:17 AM in response to m021478

    i have same issue. I think Amazon AWS Snowball may be the solution.

  • by babowa,

    babowa babowa Aug 8, 2016 7:56 AM in response to kmillard2
    Level 7 (32,009 points)
    iPad
    Aug 8, 2016 7:56 AM in response to kmillard2

    Aside from the fact that you've revived a one year old dormant thread, that service transfers data in the cloud - it does not increase the speed of your internet connection.