http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7044606.stm
More a case of impractical to backup
Somewhere between 500 and 1000 DVD's seems a hell of a lot to me.
Forget about using your ISP, that's 2.5 YEARS at ADSL upload speeds
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7044606.stm
More a case of impractical to backup
Somewhere between 500 and 1000 DVD's seems a hell of a lot to me.
Forget about using your ISP, that's 2.5 YEARS at ADSL upload speeds
If you dance barefoot on the broken glass of undefined behaviour, you've got to expect the occasional cut.
If at first you don't succeed, try writing your phone number on the exam paper.
I sense a dramatic increase in the range of emotions felt as a user finds his 4TB hard drive has crashed. I say we just use the brains of the dead. You may get lucky and get someone who had a photographic memory.
There's no problem backing up a 4TB drive. Just use another 4TB drive.
Last edited by Sang-drax : Tomorrow at 02:21 AM. Reason: Time travelling
I'm starting to wonder exactly what the point is. I mean, I'm no newsgroups junkie or whatever, so if I go ahead and install every single one of the 200 or so bits of software that I have, plus rip all the tracks from the 350 CDs I have, then I miiiiight just fill 160GB.
Okay, so ripping DVDs (like there's a real need to do that) would push it much higher but unless it's gonna become the norm to keep a whole library full of HD titles on your hard disk (where they shouldn't be, you don't write anything to them after all) then there's gonna be a whole stack of peeps using only 10% of these drives.
Well, until Microsoft get round to a new OS.
well 4 TB of storage right now is kind of impractical for the regular computer user...but it is quite practical for those who do video editing.
A guy at work who I know does video editing has about that much disk space on his computer (between a few different drives) and he uses almost all of it.
I have almost a terabyte in anime alone, but I had delete half of it so I could fit more, since I didn't have the DVDs to back it up. As a side note, that was compressed, not uncompressed, if it was in mpeg format still, it would have been quite larger. (Most DivX/Xvid avis)
On a related thought, I have a about a quarter of my DVDs ripped to my system, now a days it is really easy to set up your system to hook up to your TV and home theater stuff. Then you can just go to your Videos folder of your media player and pick which DVD you would like to watch. I know once I get settled into my new place (just moved) I am going to work on getting my TV hooked up to my computer for video watching purposes.
Last edited by Wraithan; 10-15-2007 at 10:11 PM.
Perhaps that was an exaggeration, but not too great of one, I have a ton of anime, 'bout half of it was download for friends who lack broadband connections or wanted me to author DVDs for them of it.
So you should use the proper optical storage for back up ^)
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post...s-of-data.html
All problems in computer science can be solved by another level of indirection,
except for the problem of too many layers of indirection.
– David J. Wheeler
I've used 310/580 GBs of my space, and then I have a 500 GB external backup drive. I was rather amazed about a month ago when I saw a 1 Terabyte HDD at Best Buy.
Partitioning will be an interesting factor on these huge disks, too. MBR-based partitions can't be larger than two terabytes, so a 4 terabyte drive would need at least two partitions. You can always use GPT to get around this limitation, but you'll need Windows Vista (or Linux) to be able to read/write to it. (And forget about booting. GPT-based disks need an EFI to be able to boot.)
Last edited by joeprogrammer; 10-19-2007 at 12:42 PM.
Its much more convenient to access several hundred DVD's through media player than by flipping through half a dozen CD satchel's. I cant wait until I have a terabyte of RAM no seriously Id use it right now.