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scream-of-consciousness; "If you're trying to change minds and influence people it's probably not a good idea to say that virtually all elected Democrats are liars, but what the hell."
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"If the number of Islamic terror attacks continues at the current rate, candlelight vigils will soon be the number-one cause of global warming. " |
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Certainly you've backed up all of your vital files to DVD by now?
Casca
I got a lot of those drives here at work. We use them as shared storage. HOWEVER, OF THE LAST 6 THAT I BOUGHT, 3 WENT TITS-UP WITHIN A MONTH.
You have been warned.
Tits are good...drive failures bad.
I had more problems with the IOMEGA Zip drives (circa '96) than I care to remember. Soured me on external drives but not tits.
did I mention that tits are good?
Yatalli
Those GD Iomega's ... grrrr. they used a compression algorithm that's utterly proprietary, and incompatible on anything after Win 98. Did I say Grrrr?
Were your HDs that failed Maxtors?
Been using a Western Digital 160gig external for about 2 years for back-ups and other stuff. Norton 360 automatically backs-up. Plugged it in and no problems since.
Saw a one terrabite external at Best Buy the other day; I think it was about $250.
As a fall back, I've been using Dell Data Storage for off site. 10 gigs goes for about $10 a year and you can schedule your back-ups.
I had several bad maxtor HDs. Ive used ZIP for back up until "Vista"tm because the drivers aren't ther for Iomega. I was going to back up things with CDs/DVDs but read that they degrade relatively fast (10 years). Magnetic is better (Zip) for long term. Any expertise out there?
Tim
Tim, optical media, CDs & DVDs are far more stable than magnetic unless they're left in the sun or exposed to high heat. If you stick them in a binder, and leave them in a drawer, they should last the rest of your life. Magnetic media is more fragile, and has a shelf-life measured in years, not decades.
Casca
Use the Seagate's at work and I've got a LaCie at home. Both are fine, but to make GD sure backup what you need to DVD. Oh, yeah, when you're burning DVD's make sure you use the 4x option otherwise it may not come back.
Horry Clap! You're gonna love firewire 800. Almost 3x as fast as USB2 when I do system backups.
--Jack
I've used Lacie and Glyph drives for years with no failures yet. I rotate three for critical b/u. Two are always in the gun safe, the other off site at my biz. Better paranoid than sorry.
Tonto G.
If you're not burning your files to cds or dvds you're the one that's going to get burned. All hard drives fail eventually. Count on it. I learned that lesson the hard way five years ago and I still cry over files I lost.
Grinfilledelt
I don't get it Celt. I have several DVD's full of files. If one drive fails, I'll buy a new one. Hell, I still have my old 160/320 floppy drives in case I ever have the occasion. BTW, look at this for nostalgia
IBM Personal Computer (PC)
Model: 5150
Released: September 1981
Price: US $3000
CPU: Intel 8088, 4.77MHz
RAM: 16K, 640K max
Display: 80 X 24 text
Storage: optional 160KB 5.25-inch disk drives
Ports: cassette & keyboard only
internal expansion slots
OS: IBM PC-DOS Version 1.0
Always have your drives mirrored. That way, your data will survive a failed drive.
(I'm paranoid. I back up my mirrored drives to a backup mirrored drive)