Currently viewing the tag: "Western Digital"

Ever since I got the WD My Book Studio II, I keep all my photos in it as it is a RAID device.  A 2TB device provides 1TB of storage when it is in RAID 1 mode (mirrored) and I quickly approach running out of room with RAW files being part of what I keep.  Luckily I have a couple slightly bigger capacity compatible drives to let me upgrade  the external unit with.

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Tagged with: FireWiregadgethard driveiMacMyBookRAIDstorage solutionWestern Digital
 

Ever since I took down the Windows Home Server and converted it as a Linux file server, I have been having some trouble connecting my wife’s Windows 7 laptop to the Samba file shares.  And recently her hard drive is getting full and we need a quick way to backup her work.  So I decided to pick up a Western Digital My Book Essential while it was on sale.

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Been meaning to sort out the storage on my iMac for a while now. My iMac comes with only a 320GB hard drive. At first I thought that was plenty of room. But with a camera that takes photos at 15M pixels, and a whole bunch of podcast videos I have been downloading from iTunes, I was running low with hard drive space on my iMac. I tried to keep files on the Windows Home Server but even with a GBit network, the added latency does not feel as good as accessing files on the local hard drive. Hence some new hardware is justified :)

The iMac has 1 x FireWire 800, 1 x FireWire 400, and 3 x USB 2.0 connections. Obviously speed is important here and FireWire 800 is the default choice. Been looking around on the market for something that also provides some fault tolerance. Was considering Drobo ($350 just for the box and no hard drives) but cannot really come up with the money for it. So finally settled with a somewhat cheaper solution: a WD My Book Studio Edition II with 2 TB storage ($280).

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P1040719

We bought an HP Pavilion notebook from Future Shop about 15 months ago.  At the time of purchase, it was the right notebook without costing an arm and a leg.  Smallish footprint, bright screen, 250GB hard drive and a decent CPU makes it an attractive package for less than $800.  After 15 months’ usage, the notebook hard drive is starting to make some ticking noise.  Time to look into finding a replacement hard drive.

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Tagged with: hard driveHitachihome serverHP PavilionnotebookrecoverySeagateWestern Digitalwhs