tech: February 2008 Archives

to follow up...

I ordered a hard drive today, for the photo back-up thing. I went with a 500 gig external firewire 400 drive.

It also has USB 2, though I don't intend on using it. When you're dealing with long, large transfers of data, firewire easily outpaces USB 2, regardless of their specs. I didn't go the SATA route because my main computer is a MacBook which doesn't have an expansion slot for the appropriate card needed to connect to the drives.

I went with 500 gigs, because while still being obscenely large, it was a bit more stable than the 1 TB drives. Most reviews on the larger drives make them still sound a bit flakey, which is reasonable considering how new they still are. Even so, I'd guess as a strictly photo-archive, 500 gigs will hopefully last me another year or 2. I calculated that the largest my photo collection could currently be is 140 gigs, but I think realistically it's gonna be somewhere between 20 and 40, not counting thumbnails and crap.

I picked up a reasonably-well-reviewed drive from Newegg.com for $120 including shipping.

to follow up...

I ordered a hard drive today, for the photo back-up thing. I went with a 500 gig external firewire 400 drive.

It also has USB 2, though I don't intend on using it. When you're dealing with long, large transfers of data, firewire easily outpaces USB 2, regardless of their specs. I didn't go the SATA route because my main computer is a MacBook which doesn't have an expansion slot for the appropriate card needed to connect to the drives.

I went with 500 gigs, because while still being obscenely large, it was a bit more stable than the 1 TB drives. Most reviews on the larger drives make them still sound a bit flakey, which is reasonable considering how new they still are. Even so, I'd guess as a strictly photo-archive, 500 gigs will hopefully last me another year or 2. I calculated that the largest my photo collection could currently be is 140 gigs, but I think realistically it's gonna be somewhere between 20 and 40, not counting thumbnails and crap.

I picked up a reasonably-well-reviewed drive from Newegg.com for $120 including shipping.

I take a lot of photos.

(duh).

But they pile up on my computer for a month or so, and then get backed up to DVD. At which point, I don't access them very much. Call it frustration with having to dig up the disk and look though it. Call it "out of sight, out of mind...". But I just don't go back to my old photos often.

So I was thinking maybe I could get a huge external hard drive, and try to dump ALL my photos on there. I mean... just now I found a 1 TB gigabit ethernet SAN drive for about $200. That would hold me for a little while.

Thoughts?

(I really do tend to find I get much more use out of things when they're accessible.)

I take a lot of photos.

(duh).

But they pile up on my computer for a month or so, and then get backed up to DVD. At which point, I don't access them very much. Call it frustration with having to dig up the disk and look though it. Call it "out of sight, out of mind...". But I just don't go back to my old photos often.

So I was thinking maybe I could get a huge external hard drive, and try to dump ALL my photos on there. I mean... just now I found a 1 TB gigabit ethernet SAN drive for about $200. That would hold me for a little while.

Thoughts?

(I really do tend to find I get much more use out of things when they're accessible.)

About the Person

Patrick Calder is a graphic designer living in Washington, DC with one attack cat. He owns and operates The Design Foundry, a design studio in downtown DC. He takes pictures in his free time, and dreams of one day being an adult.

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the tech category from February 2008.

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