1 TB dead! Waaaah!
Friday, 16 April 2010 12:54 pmOne of my 1 terabyte drives has suddenly, inexplicably died. Waaah! I bought it less than a year ago and it was almost full. Some of it was backed up, but much wasn't -- how do you backup a 1TB drive? The only way is with a second 1TB drive, and I didn't think I could afford to splash out on another drive merely as backup for my most recent drive. The disk itself is under warranty, but the data is the most valuable part.
Crap. Crap. Crap!
I'd been getting creepy, uneasy feelings about my oldest drive -- a now-ancient 120GB drive almost 7 years old, and was trying to gather the funds to buy a backup drive to safeguard the data on it. Who would have thought that my youngest drive would be the first to die. :(
Dammit!
Crap. Crap. Crap!
I'd been getting creepy, uneasy feelings about my oldest drive -- a now-ancient 120GB drive almost 7 years old, and was trying to gather the funds to buy a backup drive to safeguard the data on it. Who would have thought that my youngest drive would be the first to die. :(
Dammit!
no subject
Date: 2010-04-16 06:33 am (UTC)If you can't resurrect it by conventional means and warranty repair is synonymous with "we'll give you a new one", opening it and transplanting the drive elsewhere may work.
no subject
Date: 2010-04-16 06:55 am (UTC)If it was an external drive pulling it out of the enclosure might well have worked. Thanks for the suggestion anyway, Annie. I appreciate ideas on anything I might have overlooked. I'd really be glad to be wrong on this. :/
no subject
Date: 2010-04-16 01:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-04-17 01:40 am (UTC)Today has been spent sorting through oodles of directories of stuff. Luckily I habitually (obsessively) use redundancy on almost everything, so I have a lot of copies of stuff -- many more than I thought I had, which is a great relief. I have still lost a lot, but not quite as much as I'd thought. Some of the newer stuff was, I think, mostly books downloaded from the net. Most of those are on Project Gutenberg, Project Gutenberg Australia, Textbook Revolution, and BookBoon so can be downloaded again.
My newer CDs and DVDs can be ripped again -- time-consuming, but not a great problem.
I need to set aside funds for another backup drive. It is scary not having duplicate copies for so much of this stuff now.
I really need to learn more about S.M.A.R.T. drive technology. Most drives have it, but no operating system that I know of uses it as standard. There is this technology that can warn us when a drive is about to fail, but is mostly just out of reach. How stupid is that.
no subject
Date: 2010-04-19 06:24 am (UTC)Any single point of failure is just that.
If you want a real backup, try: http://mozy.com/home/
Of course, it'll take a long time (and a lot of bandwidth) to back up everything, and catastrophic restore would be expensive (ship you a disk from the US, ouch), but if you're not backed up off site, you're not backed up.
no subject
Date: 2010-04-19 11:23 am (UTC)I must say I've been getting increasingly nervous about having everything here on one site. It is one of the reasons I'm growing more affectionate of external hard drives. I can pick them up and take them up to my folks' place and store them there. Every time bushfire season comes in I get the heebie-jeebies again.
There certainly is a lot to be said for off-site storage. And with Linux I could connect to my Folks' machine and still have access to my data from here.
Thanks David. You've really helped to push my mind along some neat directions. :)
no subject
Date: 2010-04-20 01:15 am (UTC)I highly recommend using Dropbox and MozyHome for really critical files in addition to doing your own raid + offsite backups. You get 2GB free, which is not a huge amount, but it's enough for really critical documents.
Sign up for dropbox using this link: https://www.dropbox.com/referrals/NTIzMjE0NTM5
and you and I will both get an extra 250MB of free storage. :-)
no subject
Date: 2010-04-20 08:25 am (UTC)I could certainly use 2GB free storage for important stuff, but I can already do that with my website, with the advantage that if I want to let someone else have access I send them the link. And gmail has almost 3GB of free storage. Or I can keep stuff on my two 16GB thumbdrives (which saved me a lot of grief in this latest crash).
Paying $10 a month for 50GB doesn't sound like much money, but when you start adding up all the little things each that don't cost much, they end up eating all my available funds. [sigh]
Hard drive space is about 6GB per dollar now. For effectively $10 I can have 60GB of hard drive space for the life of the drive. If use use RAID or a software backup or mirror then 60GB+safety is $20 for some unknown number of years. If I keep those drives offsite (at my folks') then the only advantage dropbox offer is convenience... which admittedly is still an important advantage: an inconvenient solution tends not to get used, no matter how useful it is.
Thanks for the link, David. I will think more on it. I tend not to make quick decisions, as you can see. :)