Hard drives vs DVDs, $ per GB: Tie
May. 27th, 2009 08:21 amNewegg had 1TB Hitachi hard drives on sale for $75 and free shipping yesterday.
I pay about 30 cents for a DVD blank, and I typically leave about 300 megs unused on every one I burn. So a 1000GB drive is about equivalent to 250 DVDs, space-wise, and is a heck of a lot more convenient and takes less time to deal with than sorting out all those files to go onto DVD. Those 250 30c DVDs would cost....$75.
Also, in my experience anyway, hard drives are FAR more reliable than DVDs.
I need to come up with a good system for playing media off the hard drive, probably with the MythTV box because the set-top DVD player only understands FAT filesystems, and though FAT32 will technically do 2TB, I'm not sure it's a good idea.
I pay about 30 cents for a DVD blank, and I typically leave about 300 megs unused on every one I burn. So a 1000GB drive is about equivalent to 250 DVDs, space-wise, and is a heck of a lot more convenient and takes less time to deal with than sorting out all those files to go onto DVD. Those 250 30c DVDs would cost....$75.
Also, in my experience anyway, hard drives are FAR more reliable than DVDs.
I need to come up with a good system for playing media off the hard drive, probably with the MythTV box because the set-top DVD player only understands FAT filesystems, and though FAT32 will technically do 2TB, I'm not sure it's a good idea.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 02:24 pm (UTC)Right now I burn DVDs in pairs. One goes to the basement, one to my office at work. Thus my costs are the same as buying a pair of drives. But taking one drive back and forth between house and work to update it, not to mention inserting/removing from dock, probably radically cuts drive life.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-27 03:14 pm (UTC)I am running two drives with anything I don't care to lose. There is a LOT of stuff that I have that really I don't care that much if I lose. Several terabytes of documentaries, for instance. I like the stuff and watch one at random from time to time, but if they all just went away one day, I'd utter a curse and keep going.
I am actually running THREE hard drive copies of critical stuff; that is, family photos and video, and my "My documents" folder. I was running two, but I decided that I wanted three for a couple of reasons:
1- I want an accessible backup, plus an off-site backup
2- I realized that a misconfigured piece of software or some other problem (lightning strike, etc) could fry every drive in the system - if it happened when I had the primary and the backup plugged in, I'm boned. If I have TWO backups, there's never a time when all three copies are in the machine at once.
I also have a DVD-R copy of family photos, just for good measure.