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Burnt Hard-drives
 

offline childkiller from santiago (Chile) on 2003-06-14 01:10 [#00740105]
Points: 543 Status: Regular



i`ve been having nightmares lately about my harddrive
getting burntout, which would mean total collapse for me.
Since i can`t get enough cd`s to backup 40 Gb, i`ve been
thinking about getting a new Hard Drive and coppying all of
my files into it, then keep it in a safe place.
Should i do this?
What are the chances of Hard Drives getting burntout?


 

offline Ophecks from Nova Scotia (Canada) on 2003-06-14 01:14 [#00740111]
Points: 19190 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



My fucking 60 gigger just died the other day and now I've
only got my ancient 10 gigger left. Fucking HATE IT. I had
everything backed up on CD-R (I've got a few hundred of
those things), but the pain is real. Backed up or not,
60,000MB of vanishing files is an annoyance. And I don't
even know what went wrong or even if I can get it working
again.

Burn everything to disc, I don't trust ANY fucking harddrive
anymore. CD-Rs are cheap.


 

offline childkiller from santiago (Chile) on 2003-06-14 01:14 [#00740112]
Points: 543 Status: Regular



anyone?


 

offline childkiller from santiago (Chile) on 2003-06-14 01:15 [#00740114]
Points: 543 Status: Regular



hmmmm....i dunno ophecks, i`d have to get tons and tons of
cd`s


 

offline Ophecks from Nova Scotia (Canada) on 2003-06-14 01:16 [#00740115]
Points: 19190 Status: Moderator | Followup to childkiller: #00740114 | Show recordbag



I know. My backup project lasted weeks and weeks, I just
back EVERYTHING up as I get it. I can understand how much of
a pain in the ass it would be to do it all at once, yeah.
But I could NOT trust all that data on any harddrive, new or
not.


 

offline childkiller from santiago (Chile) on 2003-06-14 01:30 [#00740125]
Points: 543 Status: Regular



anyway, what are the best hard drives out there?


 

offline Verkrampte from Renton (United States) on 2003-06-14 02:33 [#00740178]
Points: 1182 Status: Regular



i just deleted 10 gb of music i dont listen to :/


 

offline pantalaimon from Winterfell (United Kingdom) on 2003-06-14 03:16 [#00740203]
Points: 7090 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



just get an external hard drive and back up to that, sorted.


 

offline JAroen from the pineal gland on 2003-06-14 03:34 [#00740222]
Points: 16065 Status: Regular



get a tapestreamer, you can get 120 gig tapes and a drive
for about 400 $ (methinks)


 

offline joakimlinden from Skövde (Sweden) on 2003-06-14 03:36 [#00740227]
Points: 462 Status: Regular



oh... i suddenly had a flashback from the early days of my
childhood... remember those tapes with Turbo 250 (or
whatever it was called) for the old Commodore 64? First you
had to load the turbo, then you had to fastforward to the
game and watch colourful flickering bars for ten minutes,
often to the sound of complete destruction, and finally the
game was ready to be played...
RUN
*SYNTAX ERROR!*



 

offline joakimlinden from Skövde (Sweden) on 2003-06-14 03:48 [#00740232]
Points: 462 Status: Regular



oh... to try and be a little helpful:
if you have a 60gb drive I can't imagine how all that space
is filled with unreplaceable stuff - most of it is probably
mp3's (many of which you can get again if catastrophy where
to happen) and programs, right?
Now... wav-files can be compressed with WinRar so that they
shrink to between 3/4:s - 1/2 the size they where, do that
if you have a lot of songs that you don't want to mp3.
Make folders for everything, for example: Music -> Songfiles
-> Cubase SX
That way you'll have a good overview when it's time to use
the backups.
Make detalied notes about what you must backup so that you
can get it over with quickly once you start the process...
I've forgotten stuff like the ICQ history files (two years
of messages lost), Outlook mail database, .ini files for
programs like Cool Edit (if you've made your own effect
patches) and so on. Make notes, make sure you don't forget
anything that you might miss.
Many setup files can often be discarded - try finding a
newer version of the program instead of backing up a year
old version...
You'll probably end up with just a few CD's of real
importance instead of tons of useless stuff.


 

offline dave_g from United Kingdom on 2003-06-14 07:40 [#00740260]
Points: 3372 Status: Lurker



buy a new motherboard with RAID on it. What RAID does, is
allows you to use multiple hard disks, but unlike
traditional scsi/ide setups, you can mirror and/or stripe
drives. mirroring allows one drive to be the mirror image of
the other, ie a 1:1 backup. striping allows for faster data
access by spreading data over 2 disks. you can also stripe
mirrors and all sorts on upto 5 disks(i think) in one go.
with 2 hd drives, mirrored, when (not if) one dies, the
other will have a copy of all the data.
bin/recycle/dismantle the broken disk, put in a new one, the
data is then transferred to it from the mirror disk, and
bobs youre fathers brother...two mirrored disks,ready to go
but also ready for the next crash!


 


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