Seagate and WD both serving me good. Yet will recommend WD either internal or external depending on your choice.I'm looking to buy a portable Hdd/sdd to store our family photos and videos. Can u guys recommend reliable brand or product.
+1Seagate and WD both serving me good. Yet will recommend WD either internal or external depending on your choice.
I need an external Hardrive which should be able to connect to MacBook pro, Lenovo laptop (Linux mint) , HP (windows) and MiTv 4a Android TV.Seagate and WD both serving me good. Yet will recommend WD either internal or external depending on your choice.
This is something which cannot be guaranteed using just one external USB disk.As this harddrive will contain precious family photos, I want a reliable storage which will work for long time.
Use mechanical HDDs and DVD as backup. I heard SSD loses its data if it's kept turned off for more than a year. If the family pics are really precious you need backups on 3 different storage mediums.As this harddrive will contain precious family photos, I want a reliable storage which will work for long time.
I need an external Hardrive which should be able to connect to MacBook pro, Lenovo laptop (Linux mint) , HP (windows) and MiTv 4a Android TV.
Apart from high write and read speeds, is there any other benefit to prefer SSD over HDD. Which is more reliable in the long run?? HDD or SSD??
As this harddrive will contain precious family photos, I want a reliable storage which will work for long time.
You can always use 7-zip with aes-256 bit encryption to compress & password lock the files before uploading to cloud.If you don't care about privacy, most reliable will be cloud.
One deep scratch by mistake and it's worse than paperweight. Physical media always will have higher chance of failure than a cloud environment with some big organization which have replications across regions.Physical archival media like CD, DVD or Blu-ray are more reliable and long lasting than HDD/SSD.
The probability of a hdd/sdd failure vs the probability of a deep scratch on a disc by mistake?One deep scratch by mistake and it's worse than paperweight. Physical media always will have higher chance of failure than a cloud environment with some big organization which have replications across regions.
I would sacrifice privacy for accessibility and avoid the risk of 1 fatal drop/scratch and losing everything.the frequency of accessing particular set of photos vs the cost of upkeep for a cloud storage service also matters, not to mention the privacy/data leak issues.
You can use cryptomator to encrypt files easily and upload to onedrive or GoogleIf you don't care about privacy, most reliable will be cloud.