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View Full Version : I now know (1) what a head crash looks like and (2) my backup regime worked.



pyRRhic
04-08-2015, 3:35pm
I recently lost a hard drive and was able to recover all but the last ten minutes of activity. It was my data drive which was on a continuous backup regime (with a weekly off-site copy). We are too far along a copper wire to use any cloud solution.

Nevertheless, it was still a frustrating job to get back on air - with a few $%^%^$$# for measure.

Pulled the hard drive apart and had a closer look at what happened ... and, as a consolation prize, scored 2 rare-earth magnets.

pyRRhic

[over a 10cent piece]
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-hvL__PHdDwY/VbsDvbWbumI/AAAAAAAAZ6c/iP9bQ-X9s4g/s640-Ic42/157311419735.jpg

ameerat42
04-08-2015, 3:44pm
That's a real "heads up":D

tandeejay
04-08-2015, 7:43pm
Any form.of RAID storage will protect against a drive failure without the need to restore data (except RAID 0 which has zero redundancy) I have RAID 1 on my home computer (mirroring) as an insurance policy.

landyvlad
05-08-2015, 1:29pm
and what does one do with rare-earth magnets?

Kym
05-08-2015, 1:51pm
and what does one do with rare-earth magnets?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rare-earth_magnet

They make nice toys, very strong, sometimes handy for DIY projects

pyRRhic
05-08-2015, 2:35pm
and what does one do with rare-earth magnets?

Also, drag a screw driver across a magnet 10 or so times and the driver becomes magnetized - very handy to hold screws to the head - particularly for small screws and/or tight places.

ameerat42
05-08-2015, 3:24pm
and what does one do with rare-earth magnets?


Also, drag a screw driver across a magnet 10 or so times and the driver becomes magnetized - very handy to hold screws to the head - particularly for small screws and/or tight places.

Also, catch your finger unawares between two of them and they're really good for a blood blister and a LOUD SQUEAL of :eek:UCH!
(And speaking in tongues!)
:D