christopherhord

My new 1 TB drive can has future, please?

In Society, Technology on March 7, 2011 at 9:15 pm

It still sits in its box — I’m that blase about it. The finest storage technology 2007 had to offer — my one terabyte drive. Target had a special — I could get the Seagate ST310005EXA101-RK (Just rolls of the tongue, doesn’t it?) for $60 bucks. It’s a clearance. I got my 1TB drive because it’s a little old hat now.

I admit it. I’m old. My earliest computers didn’t have a hard drive. You were limited to about 400 Kb on a floppy disk. It went to 800 Kb and we damn near lost our minds over that.

Seagate ST310005EXA101-RK hard drive

Welcome to the party, pal!

So, a terabyte is, on some fundamental level, fantastic and futuristic to me. To be able to get it for $60 at a Target clearance sale is, indeed, an indication we live in wondrous times.

More seriously, the new drive is meant to allow me to comfortably just set Time Machine up to do its thing. I run a backup every night, but I don’t even want to think about the process of backing up my desktop to an external drive anymore for a long time. Time Machine can handle that.

It’s also a test of sorts. The Seagate ST310005EXA101-RK honsetly doesn’t have stellar reviews. Some people complain about noise. Some people have had it die on them very quickly. I read questions about the quality of the electronic components. Still, with storage, it’s OK to fail upwards — it’s still probably the best drive I’ve ever had, and it has a one-year warranty.

So, expect an occasional updates on how this drive holds up. I had a bad experience on a low-end Western Digital. We’ll see how the Seagate compares.

  1. I’ve had one fail. It killed me. I still have it at my home in HOPES that one day I’ll have the $500-700 it will take to recover my pictures from it. 😦 All my pictures from my two years in Ukraine. 😦

    Since then I’ve bought 2 new hard drives. One 1-TB and one 2-TB. They’re spotty about when they work. It makes me nervous. I’m ready to buy another so that I have it at the ready. Now I would use them as a backup, only using them when needed. Previously I would use them directly–keep it connected to the computer, watch movies/tv shows off them. Now, nope. I transfer the information and then unplug and turn it off. 😦

  2. I can relate. Every drive I have now is due to be relegated to backing up backups, as soon as I can afford something I really trust.

    Thanks for reading and commenting!

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