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I’ve been searching for something like this for some time now. People are really focused on the project and organizing features… but I’m happy that my library is going to be completely backed up now. I tested this a few times. I’m a video production artist who lives contract to contract. So before I trust anything with my data I test test and test again. In the first tutorial video the App promised that it could spread my project library across several disks. So the first thing I did in my free trial period is test the library. I’ve had a stack of used external Hard Drives from before I owned a RAID disk. So I plugged them in and built a library, and a backup library that spanned 4 drives… then I loaded it with projects and wiped one of them at random. Every time I launched PPM it warned me that something happened and offered to regenerate the library from the remaining disks… it worked every time except once when I killed more than one drive. Every time it worked I reopened the projects and checked to see everything was good. Every time I opened my projects all was exactly as I left it… If you don’t have a RAID drive and you work on projects, you need something like this app to make sure you're backed up. The rest of the features made sense too but I’m still digging into them. It feels like a pro tool (no pun intended) that the big studios use to pass around their assets. Update: Ok! Color me impressed. On top of the features above, this serves as a solid project management solution. I highly recommend checking out the videos about how assets work (I think it’s chapter three). I’ve been making test projects in my spare time. The app seems to be able to reduce file space enough between versions to justify keeping multiple versions of my project. Wow! I think I’m going to make the switch.
I made a library. I made a project. I added files to the project. I worked on the project. I saved the project to my library. I closed it and deleted the folder off of my computer. Done and done. I’m still inside the free trial period but I see myself using this for a long time.
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