h a l f b a k e r yOh yeah? Well, eureka too.
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Why not install a RAID system? Oh yeah, Windows doesn't tolerate RAID systems that well... |
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I have to agree with RayfordSteele. If you're
going to have extra hard drives lying around,
you might as well put them to work as a nice
semi-redundant RAID system, and enjoy the
extra storage and bandwidth they provide.
Also, then when one of them crashes, the
system can automatically fail-over to the
others; the user might not even know a disk
crash occurred. |
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Hmm. Then the next step would be to shrink
down the 10 drives, put them into a single box,
and make it look like a regular hard drive, so
the OS doesn't need to worry about
supporting RAID. Then in a few years people
will start wanting to use several of these at
once in a RAID configuration, and the cycle
repeats... |
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Some suppliers provide a 'Restore to factory settings' CD, but are you talking about OS crashes or hard-drive failures, or both? If you're using a flaky OS, a new HDD won't help, and if you have a dodgy drive, {insert your favourite OS name here} will still fail. |
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I hate those CDs. Some of us never wanted the factory settings in the first place. |
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Yahoo! will give you 25Mb of space for free, as will a lot of other people, which gives us <drumroll!> - FARVD - Free Array of Redundant Virtual Drives! |
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([Rods] - can you post "Redundant Technology Public Sculptures"? - huge mounds of old technology in public places displaying Teletext and those screensavers we don't need to use on our modern screens, all linked together with 14.4k modems and with walk-up terminals for people to write short BASIC programs.) |
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'huge mounds of old technology' - Sounds like my basement. |
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$16 on Pricewatch.com for a PC Raid Card. |
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