external harddrive?
ok so my comp is runnng relly slow lately and i just realizd it was because i only have 250mb left on my 40gb harddrive
so i need to get and external one quiick, i have thousands of pics on my comp that i dont want to loose
so if anyone has any suggestion on external harddrives, it would be great
im looking for someting in the 20gb range
TIA:mrgreen:
http://images.andale.com/f2/127/100/15852266/1122328295460_data_bank_08.jpg
Western Digital Passport WDXML800UETN 80GB 5400 RPM 2MB Cache USB 2.0 External Hard Drive $123.99 (http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16822144344)
why not an internal
Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD2500KS 250GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s Hard Drive - OEM $79.99 (http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16822144701)
I've bought from them before, and have always been very satisfied.
to answer your questions usayit
i dont have a usb 2.0 this is an older comp
i do have fire wire port though
im looking for something to just hook up to my comp, not a portable one
Just thought I'd add my 2¢.
"External drive" as in portable or just external to your computer case? If you require just an external drive, Lacie makes some pretty nice units of various sizes for USB, Firewire, or combo. I went slightly cheaper route with Acomdata. Their support sucks but their price is low and no problems so far. If you need one to take around with you, get a drive that can power itself over the USB or Firewire bus. Saves you the trouble of having to lug around another cable/power supply as well as the trouble of finding an outlet. Lacie makes one that is rugged and protected with a rubber case. Firelite also makes a bus powered external drive for either USB or firewire.
If you need one to pack in your bag to dump or back files directly from digital media, I have the Wolverine purchased from Adorama which is a copy of the one Snap Happy pictured. Works ok. 40gb version with battery power enough to load a little more than 10gb at a time. My grips:
*) NOT BUS POWERED. Still requires an external power supply/plug
*) If the battery is dead, you can't simply plug in the power supply and keep dumping from compact flash. You have to wait for the battery to accumulate a charge. In other words, power is still pulled from the battery pack regardless if the power plug is attached or not.
*) Battery could last longer. Pain to swap out the battery becuase it requires you to open up the unit wiht a screw driver. So carrying several batteries isn't really a practical option.
*) could be smaller in size.
thanks for the ideas
jeff, that looks like a mighty fine idea....
btw i have more than one comp (3 to be exact) but this is the only one with dsl, so its the only one i use very often
then burn an image of ur current hdd and get a 400gb hdd and reinstall the image and u have a upgraded hdd of 400gb and fit the small one to a spare ide/sata port on ur pc and run them like that.
this way u have a hard copy of your file/pics stored so if ur pc goes bang at any time u haven't lost them.
thats what i would do, or put a 400gb hd in the spare port and transfer all files over and run the small hdd free from clutter
peace
vim
I'd say that firewire is a requirement for you. There are also external combo drives that has USB 2.0 and Firewire 400 although external drives with just one or the othe will be slightly cheaper. As stated earlier, Acomdata is cheap but there are better drives out there. They available at the local computer store (CompUSA for example) and inexpensive.
I have two Acomdata 250gb firewire drives... haven't had any problems yet. In the past, I had a Acomdata combo drive but was unable to boot my Mac from the firewire port... Contacted Acomdata but never ever got a response.. hence why I think their support sucks. But cheap is cheap.
Another dumb design.... they advertise that the drives can be stacked and daisy chained. Which is true.... but the power supplies are NOT daisy chainable. Great! So I need a power strip of 6 plugs to power my 6 drives. Talk about a mess of cables back there.
lots of good info here :)
thanks for the replys
Because, when it’s time upgrade, primarily drive fails, you have more that one computer, you’re a heavy shooter, or maybe you been shooting digital for a few years now. Personally I have more the dozen boxes of negatives over 20 plus years with film. If you’re still in to photography 20 years from now you could easily have 5000-20000GB of files. I went digital 3-1/2 years ago and have over 300gb in files
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