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Previously on "External Hard drives"

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  • Fred Bloggs
    replied
    I have been using a Buffalo Network drive connected by LAN cable to my router at home as a back up device for 5 PC's connected to the LAN by cable and wireless. So far it has been very reliable but the bundled back up software is a bit primitive. It works well under Windows XP but I have been unable to access the device with the PC's booted into Linux. Linux recognises the drive as a "Windows network" but will not open the drive.

    Leave a comment:


  • PRC1964
    replied
    Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
    I don't think even Zeity's collection of .flv files requires 3TB of disk space
    Sadly my collection of non .flv data does require that much.

    My plan B now runs at 2 Tb though I reckon I could probably ditch about a third of that if I wasn't so anal about never deleting data.

    The Maxtors are not my only backup though.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    Originally posted by PRC1964 View Post
    I've just taken delivery of a couple of these: http://www.dabs.com/productview.aspx...avigationKey=0

    So far they seem excellent and very cheap for 1.5 Tb.
    I don't think even Zeity's collection of .flv files requires 3TB of disk space

    Leave a comment:


  • PRC1964
    replied
    Originally posted by PAH View Post
    With 1.5TB to lose I'd want two as well! One to back up the other.

    For mass storage (i.e. terabytes) I went for a Windows Home Server solution. Not very portable though!
    That's exactly why I bought two. It's nice that they are small enough to lug to a client site if needed.

    Leave a comment:


  • PAH
    replied
    Originally posted by PRC1964 View Post
    I've just taken delivery of a couple of these: http://www.dabs.com/productview.aspx...avigationKey=0

    So far they seem excellent and very cheap for 1.5 Tb.
    With 1.5TB to lose I'd want two as well! One to back up the other.

    For mass storage (i.e. terabytes) I went for a Windows Home Server solution. Not very portable though!

    Leave a comment:


  • PRC1964
    replied
    I've just taken delivery of a couple of these: http://www.dabs.com/productview.aspx...avigationKey=0

    So far they seem excellent and very cheap for 1.5 Tb.

    Leave a comment:


  • PAH
    replied
    Originally posted by moorfield View Post
    Incidentally - slightly O/T - bytestor are doing a 32GB pen drive now - now that rocks ....

    http://www.amazon.co.uk/ByteStor-32G.../dp/B000WZQ1KQ

    How do the flash drives compare to hard drives in regard to transfer speed these days?

    I had a 2gb flash drive that was very slow. Replaced it with a 4gb 1" hard drive based one that's a lot quicker. Has flash progressed a lot in speed as well as size in the last 6 months?

    Leave a comment:


  • PAH
    replied
    For high capacity I got a seperate 3.5" caddy and hard drive of my choice.

    For portability I got a 2.5" one that gets power from the USB.

    Leave a comment:


  • moorfield
    replied
    Originally posted by Moscow Mule View Post
    WD Passport = 100% failure rate.
    Strange - I have a 120GB WD Passport, has worked fine for me, never any problems.

    I'm currently contemplating getting a Freecom FSG-3 wireless storage gateway as I'm getting tired of fiddling with USB drives at home and just want something sitting on my wireless setup I can dump everything onto (music, photos etc.)

    Incidentally - slightly O/T - bytestor are doing a 32GB pen drive now - now that rocks ....

    http://www.amazon.co.uk/ByteStor-32G.../dp/B000WZQ1KQ

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    I've got two Freecom external USB jobbies. One is 400GB and the other is 250GB. Both have proved themselves highly reliable, no bad sectors, no loss of data, no problems at all. Bought the 750GB Seagate Freeagent Pro for the boyf a while ago and that has worked great too.

    If you want something of a decent size that doesn't need additional power, I would go for either Amacom (I've had the Flip2Disc for donkey's years and it's great and easy to upgrade) or a Maxtor (have a very good returns policy for rare occasions you need it). Alternatively, depending on the size drive you need, you can get stupid sized USB memory sticks these days.

    Leave a comment:


  • Moscow Mule
    replied
    WD Passport = 100% failure rate.

    Well, for me anyway. I've had 3 of the buggers. First one wouldn't work from the outset.. Second one failed after a week. Third, same issue as the first.

    Of the two iomega portable drives I've had, both have been excellent. I only had to get the second one as some scrote nicked the first out of my bag on the moscow tube. Thieving Chechen scumbags.

    Edit: I've also got a WD Mybook - which hasn't failed at all - which is handy as it's my time-machine drive on my imac.
    Last edited by Moscow Mule; 18 February 2008, 11:13.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrRobin
    replied
    That's quite a lot for 320GB

    http://www.amazon.co.uk/Western-Digi.../dp/B000WP0NM8

    This is 500Gb for almost £40 less. Same retailer, same brand...

    OR

    For your hundred bucks, you could get 750GB!

    http://www.amazon.co.uk/Western-Digi.../dp/B000SKJDWI

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Originally posted by Platypus View Post
    Personally I use Seagate and find them to be very reliable indeed (I'd never use Western Digital or Maxtor having had problems with these brands regularly in the past).

    e.g. try this
    http://www.dabs.com/productview.aspx...ey=11157,50410
    thanks for that
    I should have mentioned though - its for the laptop and so i need/prefer one with a USB power supply

    Still for £70 thats a lot of storage!

    EDIT - I had the wrong link on before... its the WD passport i wanted
    http://www.dabs.com/ProductView.aspx...1003&InMerch=1

    Leave a comment:


  • Ardesco
    replied
    My experience is only with internal HD's but I have never had any problems with Western Digital. I have received 1 faulty Western Digital disk in 10 years and I had a replacement the day after I filled in an RMA on their website, can't ask for better service.

    Maxtor I have found to be cheap and cheerful but not particularly robust and I have only ever had problems with Seagate drives.

    Of course YMMV

    Leave a comment:


  • Platypus
    replied
    Personally I use Seagate and find them to be very reliable indeed (I'd never use Western Digital or Maxtor having had problems with these brands regularly in the past).

    e.g. try this
    http://www.dabs.com/productview.aspx...ey=11157,50410

    Leave a comment:

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