Seagate HDD Now With Disaster Recovery Services

Status
Not open for further replies.
[citation][nom]thebigt42[/nom]It a HDD...I needs it[/citation]

There fixed :p

[citation][nom]Pyree[/nom]Nice feature but IMO still not as good as having redundancy.[/citation]

Agree. nothing like a good old redundancy and Backup's to keep everything you want.
 

jgutz2006

Distinguished
Jul 7, 2009
473
0
18,810
So this reminded me of a quote from Tommyboy:
"they know all they sold ya was a guaranteed piece of $h!t. That's all it is, isn't it? Hey, if you want me to take a dump in a box and mark it guaranteed, I will. I've got spare time. But for now, for your customer's sake, for your daughter's sake, ya might wanna think about buying a quality product from Western Digital."
Actually i probably buy 50/50 - WD/Seagate, just think its funny to offer this service. Just goes to show you that so many clueless people back up a MECHANICAL hard drive on another MECHANICAL hard drive and thats all. i made that mistake many years ago and now i wouldnt keep anything of importance on a single backup when Flash/DVD/BD or Interet storage is so cheap as extra redundancy! Now if they want to package this service on their drives at identical prices to their competition, i take back my criticisms!
 

ginnai

Distinguished
Apr 8, 2009
136
0
18,680
I have had PCs for almost two decades with no HDD failures. It seems I should be playing the lotto more often... I always forget how often this happens to people.
 

Benihana

Distinguished
Nov 21, 2009
330
0
18,780
[citation][nom]ginnai[/nom]I have had PCs for almost two decades with no HDD failures. It seems I should be playing the lotto more often... I always forget how often this happens to people.[/citation]
Ah, I used to be like you. Then I lost 5 years worth of data (only 232 GB back then) and came to realize the importance of backups. At which point I proceeded to zip up my entire website as a "backup" and kept the backups on the same HDD as my website itself. :p Of course, that too crashed. I like to think that I now do proper backups. :D
 

figgus

Distinguished
Jan 12, 2010
364
0
18,780
[citation][nom]farleytron[/nom]I'd rather have the 5 year Seagate warranty back! (they're trying to save some money by reducing it to 2 years)[/citation]

Well, a 5 year Seagate warranty equals a 100% claim rate.
 
[citation][nom]custodian-1[/nom]back up back up and off site backup. Data recovery who needs it.[/citation]

Most people are not that smart. And some can't afford it. But for those if the HDD dies, and by that I mean wont spin up or recognize on a PC at all, and this provides a way to retrieve that data its not that bad.
 

ajcroteau

Distinguished
Jun 18, 2008
276
0
18,780
If you're not backing up critical data to a ... you deserve to lose it... IMO... besides... waiting 2 weeks for your data is just as bad as losing it... it only take a few seconds to destroy your business...
 
[citation][nom]figgus[/nom]Well, a 5 year Seagate warranty equals a 100% claim rate.[/citation]

thats funny, i've seen plenty of seagate drives that last more than 5 years.
 
maybe not a bad idea for people who take their drive on the GO.

$100 per case for Data Recovery is cheap. Where do I go? Last time I checked into Data Recovery it was about $100 per 100GB about a year ago.
 

balister

Distinguished
Sep 6, 2006
403
0
18,790
[citation][nom]figgus[/nom]Well, a 5 year Seagate warranty equals a 100% claim rate.[/citation]

Funny, considering I've got several seagate drives from various years still functioning without issue and never had any of them crash and a couple of them are 7 to 8 years old.
 

bat21win

Distinguished
Apr 22, 2009
3
0
18,510
[citation][nom]balister[/nom]Funny, considering I've got several seagate drives from various years still functioning without issue and never had any of them crash and a couple of them are 7 to 8 years old.[/citation]
Seagate quality has really gone down the toilet in recent years. Even their enterprise Sata drives have high DOA and failure rates compared to other manufacturers.
 

amigafan

Distinguished
Mar 19, 2011
212
0
18,760
Since Seagate bought Maxtor no wonder their reliability went bad. Almost all HDD failures in past that happened around me were Maxtor drives.
 
G

Guest

Guest
I mirror everything. Hard disks are cheap. 2x cheap is still affordable and provides extra peace of mind. It also means 'recovering' from a failure only takes a few minutes of my time, not hours. Of course, you still need a backup strategy on top of that.
 
G

Guest

Guest
As a IT tech that deals with failed hard drives all the time I can tell you that all brands fail. Years ago Western Digital was famous for their "click of death" which caused an instant death with no ability to recover data, many other brands develop bad sectors which still usually allows you to recover some if not most data from the drive. Either way I've had AS, NS, and Enterprise class SCSI drives die all the time. Windows 7 has a built in full image backup program, and you can get Acronis backup for XP for like 30 bucks. With external USB drives being so cheap there is no excuse not to have a backup anymore.
 
G

Guest

Guest
Get a bluray read/write drive....50GB per disc is nice for backing up everything, imaging the OS partition etc
 

animehair

Distinguished
Apr 16, 2008
24
0
18,510
Personally I believe everyone living in this modern day should have a good data backup routine...and MOST importantly it should be redundant. Keep your data on a computer with at least a Mirrored RAID configuration. THEN backup frequently...I do weekly fulls, and incs every other day. And this is still not enough...diversify and spread your data out...take advantage of cheap optical media or free cloud services as alternative paths for your data. Make copies of your backups! Its ridiculous how little time people take to do this but they spend so much time on the computer or other media devices.
 
G

Guest

Guest
[citation][nom]bat21win[/nom]Seagate quality has really gone down the toilet in recent years. Even their enterprise Sata drives have high DOA and failure rates compared to other manufacturers.[/citation]
My personal experience with seagate has varied in the last years, in this very own pc i have a 10 year old 5400 rpm seagate drive working perfectly with 22.300 hours of use, here too, i have a defective 500 gb 7200 withs 2 and a ahalf years and it began with noise and trouble after about 7000 hours of use... 2 months after the guarantee passed.
I think seagate has decreased dramatically his product´s quality in the last few years, next time ill try a samsung´s hdd or WD and see what happens.
 

shannon78

Distinguished
Dec 20, 2008
16
0
18,510
Don't count on RAID only - used to know a guy that both drives in a mirrored set up both died on the same day... he had like 30 some years of programming/coding lost, I think he paid $300 for data recovery. Now i think he uses an additional service like carbonite.

Backup, backup and oh yeah backup some more - or suffer
 

someoneelse

Distinguished
Feb 20, 2009
126
0
18,680
backup is the first thing you think of just after you've lost everything.

Personally I've never had a drive totally fail on me. I had one samsung 24/7 for 3 years that started to throw up errors but it was a gradual process and I could still backup all my data from it before chucking it.

ps fail factors are heat, use and age. in case anyone didn't know
 
Status
Not open for further replies.