B
Bob Parker
Guest
Don McKenzie wrote:
Wow - audio tapes takes me back to the DSE VZ200. Even if you did
save it to tape, it was often hit & miss getting it back into the
computer. All that fiddling with volume settings and tearing out of hair...
themselves? A lot of user reviews of big external 3.5" drives mention
the USB -> SATA interface board in the box dying, sometimes with
considerable amounts of smoke involved.
drive to the new 500GB internal drive + the 80GB external which is
stored in a safe place. Crucial day-to-day stuff gets backed up on
DVD-RW. So far I haven't needed it ... fingers crossed.
their own packages. I read that they often use Samsungs.
I know the feeling. :-(I have been paranoid about backups since my wife unplugged the power to
the TRS-80 in March 1978, after I had invested about 8 hours into a
program. She only wanted to plug in a double adapter, so she could get a
bit of ironing doneI failed to write a copy to audio tape before
the damage was done.
Wow - audio tapes takes me back to the DSE VZ200. Even if you did
save it to tape, it was often hit & miss getting it back into the
computer. All that fiddling with volume settings and tearing out of hair...
Did they fail due to physical accidents, or just fail byWhen USB V2 came along, it was fast enough to use for my dual backup
system, however I have lost many external drives in the process, so I
have to agree with you Bob, regarding external 3.5" drives.
themselves? A lot of user reviews of big external 3.5" drives mention
the USB -> SATA interface board in the box dying, sometimes with
considerable amounts of smoke involved.
These days, once a week I save a compressed full image of my mainSeeing the 2.5" more robust, notebook drives dropping in price, and
increasing in capacity, made me think about them as a new potential
backup system.
drive to the new 500GB internal drive + the 80GB external which is
stored in a safe place. Crucial day-to-day stuff gets backed up on
DVD-RW. So far I haven't needed it ... fingers crossed.
Apparently LaCie just installs whatever drives they can get, intoBut the first drive I tried was a Maxtor, and I found that it really
takes some grunt in the 5V department to fire up.
Am now trying an nice little LACIE which so far has been humming away
nicely, usually on one USB port.
their own packages. I read that they often use Samsungs.