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mirrored disks

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Vista Compatible Software matching the category mirrored disks.

RAID Backup

Working perfectly!

Usually, a person needs a backup when their disk drive fails. All disk drives fail sometime - there is no escape from that truth. But there are other reasons for keeping good backups:

  • Total disaster, such as a fire or flood that destroys the whole computer and all nearby backups.
  • Deliberate mischief, such as a virus that deletes important files.
  • Accidental deletion or modification of one or more files.

I’m sure there are more reasons, but if we cover these we’ll probably have the rest covered.

Drive Failure:

Disk drive failure can mostly be avoided by using two mirrored drives in a configuration known as RAID 1. RAID means Redundant Array of Independent Drives, and has several well-defined levels. RAID 1 is a simple comfiguration with two drives which always contain exactly the same information, hence the term “mirrored.” If either drive fails, the other simply becomes the system’s sole drive and takes over without a hitch. Since the probability of two drives failing at once is very small, RAID 1 pretty well covers that problem. The new computer here employs RAID 1.

Total Disaster:

If the building burns…

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Written by Don on December 2nd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on mirrored disks and otherSoftware and Backup and hard drive and raid.

Everything is Here

The Intel E6750 Boxed CPU and three Western Digital 320-Gb SATA hard drives arrived today, and now all of the parts are here. I set everything except the case out on the picnic table for a photo. Out of several photos, my sweetie liked this one with fall color in the background :-)

All of the stuff
Then I downloaded an Intel video that demonstrates how to install the processor and “thermal solution” (fan + heat sink) on the Intel DP35DP motherboard. After playing the video once, I played it again and did the installation while watching the video. What makes it tricky is that dozens upon dozens of tiny pins on the motherboard socket must match up with a similar number of contact lands on the CPU wafer, without bending any of the pins.

And the CPU is just a wafer at this point, not fragile exactly but the motherboard pins are. You are supposed to set the square wafer straight down on the pins without sliding it at all, but I must admit that when I set it down it wasn’t perfectly aligned and it…

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Written by Don on October 23rd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on E6750 and G.Skill and mirrored disks and otherSoftware and computer and hard drive and Computer.

Gateway Performance 600

I’m struggling with the original precept of this blog: building a new computer, because my Gateway Performance 600 is working so well now. It’s almost eight years old, but it runs a Pentium III processor at 600 MHz and has been upgraded significantly:

    System Properties show 768 Mb
  1. Added another hard disk to increase total disk capacity from 20 Gb to about 100 Gb.
  2. Replaced the original CD RW drive (failed) with a new and better Sony drive.
  3. Upgraded from Windows 98 to Windows XP Professional, now SP2 and fully current.
  4. Maxed out the memory to 768 Mbytes, comparable to brand-new low-end computers.

C drive is pretty fullG drive is more than half fullIt’s not a bad computer, and I’m wavering on the decision to replace it. Money ($1000+) and time are the reasons NOT to replace it. Here are some reasons why I might:

  • Quieter. The Performance 600, though not loud, is the loudest thing in the room.
  • Faster. I wonder how much. The processors will be ten or twenty times as fast and the disk(s) at least twice

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Written by Don on August 28th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on quiet and mirrored disks and otherSoftware and computer and Computer.

RAID

RAID is a computer acronym meaning “Redundant Array of Independent Disks.” Wikipedia. In this case we’re talking about “mirrored” disks, one of the simplest RAID configurations, where two identical disks contain identical data so that one can continue operating if the other fails. Since they contain the same data the second disk doesn’t add any disk capacity, but it does add reliability. Pros:

  • The hard disk is MUCH less apt to crash. Only people who have experienced a crash can fully appreciate this.
  • Perhaps I can get away with less backup, e.g. only back up the most sensitive data.
  • Or, I can buy a THIRD drive and hot-swap it, so the swapped-out drive is the backup.
  • I’d enjoy the experience of setting it up and using it.

Cons:

  • It’s more expensive: I need two drives, not one, and the motherboard (which manages the drives) costs a little more.
  • The drives will make twice as much noise. Hmmm.
  • It doesn’t solve ALL backup problems: If I accidentally permanently delete a file, it will be gone on BOTH drives; if lightning hits the computer it could easily take out both drives.

I’m leaning toward…

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Written by Don on August 24th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on quiet and E6750 and mirrored disks and otherSoftware and computer and raid and Computer.