thought this was kind of interesting and potentially useful ...
http://techreport.com/review/26523/the- ... a-petabyte
http://techreport.com/review/26523/the- ... a-petabyte
he said a girl named Patches was found ...
foetz wrote: i never felt the need for an ssd. i simply don't need that speed neither want that kind of "reliability"
my 4 year old mac air has it's original SSD, it was my first SSD and before that I typically killed a laptop's disk in less than a year on average. Even a toughbook. I have even gotten off the crazy religious back up train since then and just let time machine do it's thing.with SSDs in all my machines i do a lot more backups now though considering that it seems impossible to retrieve anything from a dying/defective drive.
That doesn't shock me at all.Had some code projects go from 45 minutes down to 5 minutes for clean builds.
foetz wrote: i never felt the need for an ssd. i simply don't need that speed neither want that kind of "reliability"
vegac wrote: Had some code projects go from 45 minutes down to 5 minutes for clean builds.
foetz wrote: ramdisk
GIJoe wrote: guardian: sounds like your wife is running what apple calls a fusion drive. what happens with that if the SSD part fails? is the data from the big disk in such an event retrievable (and complete)?
smj wrote: Seagate has been offering these for a while now - original as the Momentus XT line in 2010. Review at AnandTech .
foetz wrote: serious backups shouldn't be running with the target machine. hook the medium up, run the backup, disconnect, put away. at least as far away so that any sort of accident of the box can't affect the backup.