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Aug 16 2007, 06:40 AM
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#11
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Super Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 552 Joined: 25-April 05 Member No.: 4,374 myCENTs:99.56 |
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Aug 16 2007, 11:18 AM
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#12
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Way Out Of Control - You need a life :) Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 1,077 Joined: 2-August 05 From: Kapellen (Antwerp, Belgium) Member No.: 7,585 |
While it all sounds very attractive, I probably won't buy one of those
1TB ... tsssss, who needs that much data storage |
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Aug 16 2007, 12:28 PM
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#13
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 170 Joined: 30-July 07 Member No.: 23,704 |
I would really love to have one of this baby to store all my movies and songs in there. However, looking at the price, not at the moment. Have a 120 GB 2.5' external HDD and always carry it around. Its so portable and able to store so much. So I criteria, the price must be reasonable and must be portable. Not those 3.5' HDD. Would get one if these 2 criteria are met.
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Aug 17 2007, 01:59 AM
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#14
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Way Out Of Control - You need a life :) Group: Members Posts: 1,086 Joined: 21-June 05 From: New York Member No.: 6,440 myCENTs:86.41 |
I would love to get one of these Terabyte hard drives. I've been waiting for them for a while now and just won't buy them at the ridiculous prices.
This will definitely free up some space in the corner of my closet where I store my other 10+ hard drives (ranging from 120GB to 500GB in size). Having one or two of these puppies will make me a happy geek |
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Aug 17 2007, 06:59 PM
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#15
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Premium Member Group: Members Posts: 493 Joined: 15-August 05 Member No.: 7,873 |
I've had a 1TB RAID server for a couple years, yeah it was about $6000 back in the day and 4x250GB harddives, but...
But I've seen external 1TB drives for USD 500. That's not a bad price (again I know 2x500GB). I recently purchased an enclosure that links to a router and can handle upto 2 internal IDE drives for $100 plus the cost drives. I put 2 320GB drives in it and it works like a charm. Especially when I have one Mac rendering and want to access files for another project on a different machine. Makes it a nice central network drive at 1GB/s ethernet (hardwire) for $100. Can't built a cheap PC for that much. |
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Aug 18 2007, 01:14 AM
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#16
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Premium Member Group: Members Posts: 219 Joined: 13-February 07 Member No.: 20,371 |
That looks impressive, but what in the world would you do with all that space?
I mean I have trouble using up the 100GB that I have right now.... I suppose though if you are using it for video editing (tried doing that and had issues with hard drive space), then maybe it'll come in handy.... But I would wait a long time for the price to come down on those things....and honestly even so I would probably be perfectly fine with a much smaller hard drive for a while yet, seeing as my 100GB has been sufficient, and still is sufficient...so 10x that storage probably won't be necessary for me for a little while yet. |
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Aug 18 2007, 06:35 AM
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#17
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Oh come on Mrs. B! Group: Members Posts: 648 Joined: 6-June 07 From: Tasmania, Australia Member No.: 22,422 |
ive seen 1 terabyte hard drives in catalogues alot lately, usually for around $500 (australian dollars)
i would never actually buy one though, not because of the price, that doesnt bother me cos i can afford it, but the fact that its so much space! i would never use it, not even a quarter of it! i just thought of one nice idea for one though, partitioning it into like 10 100 gigabyte partitions and like putting different linux distros or something on them |
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Aug 19 2007, 05:17 AM
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#18
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Premium Idiot Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 661 Joined: 9-July 05 From: Switzerland, but currently in Pakistan Member No.: 6,943 |
I voted to wait until the price drops, but then a 1TB disk would be a very attractive option for me. Right now, here in Pakistan, the best price vs size drive you can buy is 500GB. after that, you can find 750GB models, but you pay insanely high prices for them. i think the 750 is around $260 vs the 500GB price of $130. 1TB drives are still mostly unheard of. But with 4 hard drives in my computer and a total of 800GB space (300+200+160+160) I've filled up a good three quarters of it. Doing a lot of graphics and video work, and storing the files. Then I finally shelled out and bought a 500GB external WD drive for my collection of documentaries, but filled it up and realized i still had another 200GB to go, and at the rate I download/record them, about 2GB per day, it won't be long before I'll have filled up another 500GB, and then i'll be stuck. That's without the movies I originally planned to back up as well... so when those terabyte drives come down to my price range, I'll be putting in an order for at least two. I'd have to RAID them, because I'm not about to gamble on losing a whole terabyte of stuff.
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Sep 9 2007, 09:01 PM
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#19
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SM- the Man -The Myth - The Legend Himself Group: Members Posts: 453 Joined: 4-September 05 From: Drinking da rootbeers Member No.: 8,313 myCENTs:55.62 |
Well I might be tempted to buy one, but with prices as they I be better off getting the 500 or 750gb hard drives and just combine them, the problem is that I would have no use for all that space useless I set them up just to be file backup and nothing more. I know movie downloader's will enjoy all that space because they would have about 1600+ movies on one hard drive I don't think they will have to go to another movie ever again. However, I think these big hard drives would be better suited for large networks that store a lot of files and what not; home use would be impractical unless of course you plan on doing doing file sharing of the illegal kind.
Now using this for a reference QUOTE · 1 Bit = Binary Digit · 8 Bits = 1 Byte · 1000 Bytes = 1 Kilobyte · 1000 Kilobytes = 1 Megabyte · 1000 Megabytes = 1 Gigabyte · 1000 Gigabytes = 1 Terabyte · 1000 Terabytes = 1 Petabyte · 1000 Petabytes = 1 Exabyte - · 1000 Exabytes = 1 Zettabyte · 1000 Zettabyte = 1 Yottabyte · 1000 Yottabyte = 1 Brontobyte would most people agree that 3-4 Brontobyte hard drives could store everything on the internet, after going through and delete all the dead, useless, and copy cat websites? I believe the internet as a whole is in the thousands of tera-terabytes (1000x10^12x10^12). and so the question would come out would it be more practical or more convenient? |
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