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PC Master Race
A community for PC Master Race.
Rules:
- No bigotry: Including racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, or xenophobia. Code of Conduct.
- Be respectful. Everyone should feel welcome here.
- No NSFW content.
- No Ads / Spamming.
- Be thoughtful and helpful: even with ‘stupid’ questions. The world won’t be made better or worse by snarky comments schooling naive newcomers on Lemmy.
Notes:
- PCMR Community Name - Our Response and the Survey
16 years old? Nice
I have a 2006 drive that's still chugging along. IDE at that, haha
Where did you get 16 years from? The drive says date of manufacture as 2012. 12 years is still a pretty good run for a laptop spinner though.
Hopefully your shit is backed up
It was making weird noises for a long time, so I had enough time to move the data off it.
Thats what scares me about SSDs. No moving parts to indicate imminent failure
Well, you should be replicating /backing up data regularly anyway.
All data on my mobile devices is synced to a server, which replicates locally to 2 other storage devices, and is backed up to a cloud storage.
I largely use Syncthing for mobile devices (even Windows laptops), so I'm always using a single tool/process (less confusion this way).
Everything in my / (and mounted there) is just rsynced to a simple SSD cluster at /backups, to a larger 3TB HDD cluster on my server, and from there it's .tar.xz'd, encrypted and backed up to Hetzner and Google. The server itself syncs with another server in another state.
UPS + two Internet services (and mobile).
All SSDs have SMART rapports that show the percentage of terabytes written. All of them have a max amount of tbw before they enter read only mode so your data is mostly safe.
Remember the freezer trick? Dead drive? Freeze it for 6 hours inside a zip bag and then, if lucky, you will get one final spin to copy your Docs folder.
Worked for me a couple of times.
750Gb? That was a good era.
o7