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Backup Storage Devices

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-28 9:15

I'm thinking of getting either a microdrive or flashdrive for backing up data. The extra storage of a microdrive would be nice, but I'm concerend about reliability. And just how reliable are flashdrives? Any advice would be great.

Name: CCFreak2K !mgsA1X/tJA 2005-09-28 11:04

Flash drives are quite reliable, in my experience.  Companies tend to make them quite resiliant, and because of their shape, they're resistant to physical damage.  However, they have a write life of about 10 million rewrites per cell, so don't wear it down if it's going to be long term storage.

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-29 4:46

just get an ipod

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-29 15:45

10 million rewrites is a lot.  If you assume that in ten years, you'll transfer everything worth keeping onto more modern media, that gives you a million rewrites per cell a year.   You'll need to average some 2700+ rewrites to a cell everyday for ten years to "wear it out".  For backup purposes, there's no way you'll reach that type of writing activity.

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-29 22:59

Your point is valid, but don't forget that ten million is mean between failures. You might get a lot less, or a lot more.

The problem is one bad cell can break everything, at least if there isn't error correction. There are a lot of cells in a flash. So the odds aren't as appealing as you'd think.

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-30 11:03

I wouldn't use that for backups; it's not cost-effective... You don't really need to pay for a random access long-term storage device for backups. Taiyo Yuden DVD+Rs should do fine.

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-30 12:43

>>6
That's actualy what I've been doing and will probably continue to for the bulk of my data. Some of it I need to back up more frequently though, and I was looking for simpler solution for that data. I'm getting tired of juggling DVDs, basicaly.

Name: Anonymous 2005-09-30 18:34

Flash drives are best for carrying files around (I always keep a bunch of useful tools on mine - latest antivirus and spyware removal utils, etc.), but an external hard drive is good for large backups. Get an empty external housing and just shove however big a hard drive you want in it, and you can replace it with a bigger drive later if you need to.

Name: Anonymous 2005-10-01 16:11

I use CD+RWs and an internal hard drive which I'm planning on converting to an external with a kit, or just buying a new external.

Name: Anonymous 2005-10-01 16:28

>>9
I meant a DVD+RW.

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