What I think I'll do when the time comes (when I buy the Mac mini with the 1TB SSD) will be to keep one or two external regular hard drives for data backups.
Yeah, that's pretty much what people tend to do since you get the best of both worlds...
SSD = for stuff that needs to load quick.
regular hard drive = for data storage. since it's much cheaper etc.
and yeah, depending on how important the data is... it's probably best to have three copies (two at the very least(with one probably being external)). say one hard drive, one hard drive, and maybe even DVD media etc. or... if $$$ is not a issue three copies spread on three different hard drives (with at least one being a external hard drive and not always in use on the computer in case by the off chance you get a computer virus etc and your data gets destroyed you will still have that external copy) should be pretty secure as if you lost your data doing that it would be surprising. but i don't have too much data that i would be really upset if i lost even though most of what i have i would rather not lose so i figure the two copies method should be secure enough and i am not likely to get infected with a computer virus etc in general. but i do have some external drives (just regular drives i removed from my computer recently that i am only using in the external USB 3.0 hard drive dock) for some data i got etc.
but anyways, it's not really worth buying 1TB hard drives given the cost per GB/TB ratio (unless of course your not going to need more than that in the foreseeable future in which case you can save some $$$). i would not go any less than 2TB and probably higher depending on cost difference etc.
right now with hard drives (taking a quick look around on newegg's website)...
1TB = roughly $50-70
2TB = roughly $75-ish
3TB = roughly $90-110 (the fancier ones are nearly $140 though)
4TB = generally $120-160(but for a quality one it's basically... $157.49 ($139.99 if you can get it on sale occasionally))
etc
so unless cost is paramount for you i would say 4TB is probably sweet spot where you get a lot of storage space without the cost going too high. but i guess the term 'too high' could vary from person to person but i figure as a general rule when buying hard drives expect to pay around $100 for one, maybe more depending on what your looking for.
main problem with hard drive manufacturers is that not all that long ago 3 year warranties were standard, now that seems to have shifted back to 2 years.
so while $50 for 1TB sounds like a decent price, and it is, you can see it's actually more expensive than the higher capacity drives given what your paying as i figure for about $25 more you can go from 1TB to 2TB and around $100 for a hard drive i figure is sorta expected.
i have seen one 2TB drive for a bit over $120 (not a bad price for a hard drive in general (considering i kind of expect to pay around $100 in general for them anyways)) but your basically buying a 5 year warranty with it's inflated price. but... it's just hard to pass up double that storage space for $20-40 more and still has a decent 3 year warranty. so i guess it just depends on how you look at things with cost/drive size/warranty etc in what's most important for you.
either way, in my opinion 2TB is probably the minimum i would go nowadays as it's still quite a bit of storage space and the price is still solid to where as anyone who can afford some decent storage space could not really complain about paying around $75 as i generally go into hard drive purchases, for many years now, expecting to pay around $100-120(give or take) in general if you want more of a decent capacity hard drive before the price starts to spike up too much.
i don't think i paid more than $130-ish tops for a hard drive until my very recent 5TB purchase @ $180 but since i was not going under 4TB then the 5TB i ended up buying was the best all around choice given the prices right now and i won't have space issues for basically quite a few years at this point and by the time i do i am sure say in 5 years or something hard drives will be larger and cheaper than they are now etc.
with all of that said... also, as a added bonus with higher capacity hard drive is they get faster because more data is packed into a smaller space that the hard drive head reads from (see my post about getting my 5TB hard drive below for a bit more info on this).
p.s. but i just stumbled into a 2TB refurbished hard drive for only $30 on newegg's website. the only catch... 90 day warranty. but for $30 for 2TB that's probably worth a gamble as if it dies in a year or so, the $$$ lost is minimal. but it does make you wonder though as for $30 that almost sounds too good to be true for 2TB but looking around it appears those drive are likely pulled from a server etc that was running 24/7 with plenty of writes to them. so they are more likely to be flaky in some aspects as it's sort of a gamble but for $30 it's kinda hard to pass up (as it's minimal $ losses if it does fail) if you don't mind gambling a bit and are not storing anything too important on it.
What I keep on my Macbook Pro now are mostly iTunes Library movies and songs; my own photographs and videos; and my Photoshop files. All of these take up a lot of space but they're easily backed up.
Yeah, i can imagine especially with HD video could burn up space quick or even if you got a fancy camera and take lots of photo's that space can get eaten up fairly quickly.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
i got my 5TB in on Wednesday and to do a full format is around 9 hours to complete :( (but that's normal though at that capacity as nothing is wrong with the drive) ; i could have went with a quick format (it's seconds to complete so you can store data on it) but a full format helps ensure the drive is good and i did not want to risk having a bad 5TB drive (i also ran some other tests to).
"5,000,845,586,432 bytes" is the capacity of the HGST 5TB drive i got. so it's nearly 846MB over 5TB which is a little bonus. also, the manufacture date on the drive is April 2015.
also, when transferring some of larger files from my 2TB (Samsung hard drive) the 5TB was limited by the 2TB as it(the 2TB) could only read data around 115MB/s for the bulk of the transfer but it did hit 135MB/s, give or take, occasionally even though the 5TB can go even faster. so basically the 2TB drive was the bottleneck. but i am sure if i had a large file on my SSD drive and then transferred from there to the 5TB it would then max out the 5TB hard drive which should be roughly somewhere in the high 1xxMB/s range (i.e. more than 150MB/s at the least). ill probably test this for kicks at some point or even run HD Tune v2.55 (it's free software) on it as that should show a decent graph of it's speed etc.
p.s. if you wait a bit it's likely you will see the HGST 4TB for $139.99 on newegg.com soon enough even though it's typical price lately is $157.49. but i went with the 5TB because at the moment it's not much over $20 more for another 1TB of storage (which is the one i got for $180 (normally $200)) and i could not pass that up even though $180 is a little steep for a hard drive but it still offers solid $$$/TB ratio though as at the moment comparing the $157.49 drive to the $179.99 drive (just call it $157.50 vs $180 to round it a bit) it comes out to... $39.38 per 1TB of storage. the 5TB i got comes out to $36.00 per 1TB of storage. either way, 6TB seem to be about the highest you can go before price starts to just become too much as the 8TB+ drives just ain't worth it, reliable or not, at the moment given their prices are just too much for the average person.
----------
My Top 100-ish Movies of All-Time! = http://goo.gl/EYFYdz
----------
reply
share