Results 11 to 16 of 16
-
June 19th, 2012 07:13 PM #11
Everybody's easing into cloud storage, whether they know it or not. Remember when most webmail mailbox sizes were a measly 1-2MB in the 90s? Now, you get 10GB, easy.
Specific to cloud storage, I use DropBox (5.8GB), iCloud (5GB), Google Drive (5GB), and SkyDrive (25GB). All free.
That said, I also have my 10TB (5x 2TB) Homeserver to fulfill my family's PC backup and media storage needs.
Portable documents, I keep in my 32GB USB thumbdrive... which is synced to my notebook's Briefcase and backed up to my homeserver.
I'm a data hoard. :D
BTT: If you're adventurous and you have or can find a spare similar drive, do a head swap. Hard Drive Data Recovery - Western Digital Head Swap - YouTubeLast edited by oj88; June 19th, 2012 at 07:17 PM.
-
June 19th, 2012 07:46 PM #12
The only "cloud" service I use is my email. The rest is still good old hardware.
Honestly speaking, the CLOUD is only as good as your data connection. Given the crappy speeds, so-so reliability and non-universality of wifi access, the CLOUD is still not as good an experience as compared to Korea or elsewhere with fast internet speeds.
-
June 19th, 2012 08:05 PM #13
A NAS or an in-premise server or storage will still have a purpose.
To be more specific, I'm not talking about uploading/downloading GB-sized files like movies and full SQL databases over the Internet. Just small files that you want synced-up, say, with your different mobile devices. In which case, cloud storage works very well. DropBox and SkyDrive are such examples. I can have the same files available on my laptop, home PC, work PC, iPad, or my Adroid phone. All done over the Internet. I rarely need more than a couple of files at a time. File sizes range from a few hundred KBs to several MBs at most.
To be totally honest, I seldom had to use my 32GB USB thumbdrive because of cloud storage.
Of course, having an unlimited data plan helps. :D
-
BANNED BANNED BANNED
- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Posts
- 850
June 19th, 2012 08:43 PM #14
-
Tsikoteer
- Join Date
- Aug 2011
- Posts
- 564
June 19th, 2012 08:57 PM #15tignan mo baka pwede pa ma RMA yung hard disk mo. anything na nagclicking sound ang HD, good luck. professional service kailangan kung irecover yung files sa ganyang condition. try mo lang... lagay mo hard disk mo sa zip bag, tapos lagay mo sa freezer. overnight siguro. then try mo ikabit. mas maganda kung may external hard disk case para sa HD mo para mas madali. pag nakilala at mabasa ang contents, backup mo na agad. kaso, this is a 50-50 chance.
-
June 19th, 2012 09:47 PM #16
not an expert but i had similar experiences, mixed results. One instance my HD cant be detected in windows, downloaded some data recovery software from the net, and it was able to detect the HD. From that software i was able to recover some files, however some were already badly corrupted. I also did the freeze your HD, dropping the HD, shaking it etc, but it didnt work.
im quite sure that there are proffessional data recovery services out there, i think they charge per MB/GB. goodluck sir!
as an aside, in the olden days, anyone who does not move 'ala luksa during Holy Week, especially...
Traffic!