Filename? I doubt it. 50% gets wrote to one drive, 50% gets wrote to the other.
Your data is gone... All of it, including the directories.All I want is the list of files, without any file contents. I was hoping for a slim chance that the NTFS master file table is recoverable, even if the data is not.
Your data is gone... All of it, including the directories.
Not really.If you are talking about performance yes, but in my experience most home users are after safety rather than performance. So a RAID 5 and 6 are still good options.
safety... LOL... no, no safety at all in RAID 0, not even RAID 1, it's for uptime not backupsIf you are talking about performance yes, but in my experience most home users are after safety rather than performance. So a RAID 5 and 6 are still good options.
Again, physical drive redundancy.As I said RAID 5 and RAID 6 are good options.
And many many people hear "RAID" and assume it is a backup.Agreed. I was just referring to the type of RAID, not without a backup option. Also recovering deleted or reformatted data from RAIDs is what we specialize in. So is the data normally gone. No. But of course it should be backed up.
No. Having just one good drive of a RAID 0 array is just as bad as having no drives of a RAID 0 array. The data (including filenames) is completely unrecoverable unless the data on the failed drive can be recovered.Are the filenames in NTFS recoverable from the good drive?
We are in agreement on the "RAID 5 as drive failure protection" concept.You are totally misunderstanding my reply. My initial reply was to the comment that RAID for home use are useless. I said they are not. A R5 and R6 offers protection against drive failure. So having a RAID 5 or R6 is better than a single drive in that regard. Assuming the user does not have a backup of any kind (like 75% of users) then at least there is some safety in the event of drive failure.
Of course having a backup is the number one thing people should be doing. In fact two, offline and Cloud.