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Started by LucyLux | | 20 answers
Desperately need storage. HELP!!!
What is the best and most inexpensive solution if you need storage?
Without my data I will be in DEEP TROUBLE. But External drives keep dying. What can I do?
What is the best and most inexpensive solution if you need storage?
Without my data I will be in DEEP TROUBLE. But External drives keep dying. What can I do?
Alex Kelly
August 26, 2014 3:56:59 PM
What makes you say that SSDs have a high failure rate? Especially Samsung??
I have a 128 GB Samsung 840 Pro SSD which hasn't skipped a beat in the one year that I've owned it. Additionally, I'm on Tom's every day and have been for the past year. I can recall the Samsung SSD problems on one hand!
Are you confusing SSDs with USB pen drives? The pen drives are prolly the most unreliable piece of computer hardware on the market today. SSD storage drives on the other hand are some of the most reliable!
Yogi
I have a 128 GB Samsung 840 Pro SSD which hasn't skipped a beat in the one year that I've owned it. Additionally, I'm on Tom's every day and have been for the past year. I can recall the Samsung SSD problems on one hand!
Are you confusing SSDs with USB pen drives? The pen drives are prolly the most unreliable piece of computer hardware on the market today. SSD storage drives on the other hand are some of the most reliable!
Yogi
I prefer Western Digital and Seagate drives. The WD blue drives have a 2 year warranty and the WD blacks have a 5 year warranty and cost more. Most of the seagate's are 2 year warranty. You can get the bare drive instead of the retail drive which comes in a box. The bare drive (OEM) will cost slighlty less.
You can get the drive and enclosure most anywhere, Newegg, Amazon, TigerDirect,... whichever has it cheapest. I've had good luck with Vantec enclosures. IcyDock also makes some good ones.
You may want to get a second external to keep backups of your files. You mentioned you have a Mac.You may want to look into time machine or some other backup software.
You can get the drive and enclosure most anywhere, Newegg, Amazon, TigerDirect,... whichever has it cheapest. I've had good luck with Vantec enclosures. IcyDock also makes some good ones.
You may want to get a second external to keep backups of your files. You mentioned you have a Mac.You may want to look into time machine or some other backup software.
Philip_Booth
August 26, 2014 12:44:04 AM
LucyLux
August 25, 2014 1:47:27 PM
Hawkeye22 said:
You appear to be against SSD's. Here is a link to Tom's review in case you change your mind.http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-recommendation-...
For a home brew no frills external drive, just pick up an enclosure that can handle a 3.5" internal sata drive. It doesn't matter if it's sata I, II, or III. The enlocsure should have as a minimum, USB as the external port. Putting the drive inside the enclosure is a simple procedure. Any non-techie can do it in under 5 minutes. It takes longer to get the screws in and out than it does to connect the drive. Just be sure it can handle large drives. It will list this in the specifications.
OK. Thanks! It sound simple enough.
What kind of drive should I get and where do I get it?
You appear to be against SSD's. Here is a link to Tom's review in case you change your mind.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-recommendation-...
Unfortunately I'm not familiar with any online storage/backup solutions. I don't trust my personal information in the hands of others, but that's just me. As an aside, as ex_bubblehead stated, Any storage device can fail at any time without warning, regardless of age, even drives that get great reviews. If you decide to go with online storage, then read up on their backup strategy, assuming they have one in place.
For a home brew no frills external drive, just pick up an enclosure that can handle a 3.5" internal sata drive. It doesn't matter if it's sata I, II, or III. The enlocsure should have as a minimum, USB as the external port. Putting the drive inside the enclosure is a simple procedure. Any non-techie can do it in under 5 minutes. It takes longer to get the screws in and out than it does to connect the drive. Just be sure it can handle large drives. It will list this in the specifications.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-recommendation-...
Unfortunately I'm not familiar with any online storage/backup solutions. I don't trust my personal information in the hands of others, but that's just me. As an aside, as ex_bubblehead stated, Any storage device can fail at any time without warning, regardless of age, even drives that get great reviews. If you decide to go with online storage, then read up on their backup strategy, assuming they have one in place.
For a home brew no frills external drive, just pick up an enclosure that can handle a 3.5" internal sata drive. It doesn't matter if it's sata I, II, or III. The enlocsure should have as a minimum, USB as the external port. Putting the drive inside the enclosure is a simple procedure. Any non-techie can do it in under 5 minutes. It takes longer to get the screws in and out than it does to connect the drive. Just be sure it can handle large drives. It will list this in the specifications.
LucyLux said:
Alex Kelly said:
A 128GB SSD might be ideal for you? MX100 from Crucial and 840 EVO from Samsung are great budget choices.
Unfortunately, EVO from Samsung apparently has a huge failure rate.
Has anybody tried DROPBOX or any other service? I have ably 100 files of about 50 GB each, or more.
I am leaning toward NO external drives, I am on a tight budget and I can't keep wasting money on garbage that fails in three months.
100x50GB=5TB
Check out this pricing chart that compares the various cloud storage services. Will your "tight budget" handle that? http://www.drivehq.com/help/solution/PriceComparisonWit...
You're looking at multiple spinning drives in a RAID configuration (think NAS) for that much storage. And additional media to effect backups.
LucyLux
August 25, 2014 11:23:53 AM
Hawkeye22 said:
Approximately how much storage space do you need? If you were looking at 32 and 64 gig flash drives, then a SSD is the way to go, especially since the price on these are dropping. Alex Kelley had some good suggestion for SSD's.Yes SSDs prices are dropping. I think people will probably abandon them altogether due to high failure rate and poor quality control. NO matter how cheap, if it fails, it's pricey.
LucyLux
August 25, 2014 11:22:18 AM
Alex Kelly said:
A 128GB SSD might be ideal for you? MX100 from Crucial and 840 EVO from Samsung are great budget choices.
Unfortunately, EVO from Samsung apparently has a huge failure rate.
Has anybody tried DROPBOX or any other service? I have ably 100 files of about 50 GB each, or more.
I am leaning toward NO external drives, I am on a tight budget and I can't keep wasting money on garbage that fails in three months.
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