| | I want to ask a question . I am using two HD , one is for using bt downloading i know bt causing damage in HD, is this damage the other HD ?? |
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I have a IDE 40 gb (I use for my home studio) and a SATA 160 gb (for everything else)
I have a hard-drive which is 40 gigs, it's kinda full but I am not very particular with the hd I use my dvd-rw to store files and it's so great. At 25cents I could have additional 4.7gb of space yup cheap and great space. Imagine 25cents a disc with 4.7gb space. wow
i used to have a 40gb but i completely used all of it up with programs and movies and music so my neighbor happened to have an extra 1 TERABYTE hd laying around that he gave to me!!! thats 1000 gigabytes...never gonna use that all up.
1 TERABYTE HD?!?!?!?!
Does that quantity of space even exist? Arghh... About how much do those babies cost?
I was using a 40GB hard-drive (IBM) until it suddenly stopped working last year - it couldn't be read by my computer. The worst thing was that I was in the middle of an assignment due the following Monday (it stopped working on a Friday) and lost all my data. I practically ran out to the store and got an 80GB hard-drive as it was only $20 more than the 40GB one.
Needless to say, I had to reinstall all my software and start my assignment from scratch. But I managed to complete it by Monday. Unfortunately, I am unable to securely connect my current hard-drive and have resorted to using a large clothes peg.
3,5"
Erm, 120Gb and it's getting full and I have no money to buy a bigger one. 2 Other computer have 3,2Gb hdd's and the back-up server has 4 hdd: 420Mb 850Mb 2.0Gb 3.2Gb Well, it has been at least four years since I bought this computer, which I am using, right now, as I type. Anyway, I have a 55 gigabyte hard drive, which is very old because I never ran a reformat on it. Personally, I would appreciate at least two drives with 40 gigabytes each. However, since the gaming industries are releasing massive RAM-and-space-hogging games, that take up at least three to four gigabytes of space now, we really need additional disk space. Last time I went to this IT mall, I saw this guy ordering a 300 gigabyte hard drive. With a bit of hesitation, I asked him, "Excuse me, but why would anyone need such big storage?" He told me that he needed it for his photos and music. You know, with each digital photo taking 3~4 megabytes right now (with 7~8+ megapixel pictures). Additionally, each mp3 song taking up at least (at an average) of 4~5 megabytes. Ermm... I don't think 300 is just right enough... it's too big. Anyway, his choice, not mine. But can someone explain to me the RPM issue? The more RPM, the better? If yes, how? Why?
In my ordinary PC:
1x120GB Samsung 1x200GB Seagate Server: 1x10GB Maxtor Server at a freind: 1x IBM 30GB Laying at the floor waiting to be used: 1x2.1Gb Pioneer 1x15GB IBM 1x4.2Gb Maxtor When i have more money am i gonna to by a new Samsung 250Gb disc |
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![]() What is the size of you HD |