Login
Welcome Guest! To enable all features please Login. New Registrations are disabled.

Notification

Icon
Error

Options
Go to last post Go to first unread
jncraig  
#1 Posted : Friday, November 30, 2007 8:50:54 AM(UTC)
jncraig

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 561

I just found an old blog post that I wrote a tad over two years ago:

Friday, November 18, 2005

The Affordable Terabyte

A terabyte is 1000 gigabytes.

I just purchased one terabyte of disk storage space in the form of 4 250 gigabyte hard drives. This cost me a grand total of about $320.

This amounts to 32 cents/gigabyte!

That's quite a change from the first hard drive that I bought: $400 for a 20 megabyte drive ($20,000 /gigabyte)!

I bought cheap. I found "refurbished" disks (Western Digital WD2500) at two sources: woot.com and geeks.com. Refurbished means that the disks were returned to the factory for some reason or another. They come with a 90 day warranty. My guess is that any failure is likely to be in the first 90 days, so I'm reasonable protected.

If I were shopping for new disks with new product guarantees, there are still ways to do this.
pricewatch.com: There are 250 gig drives are available for $95
tigerdirect.com: Has Seagate 250 gig drives available for $70 after rebate (but you can only get one at this price)
Look also at ecost.com, newegg.com, outpost.com
Look at slickdeals.net for other leads
Putting 4 250 gig drives in a single computer poses some problems. Almost every computer will let you install 4 disk devices. If you want a CD or DVD drive in a computer, you'll be limited to 3 drives.

You could look at 300 to 400 gig drives. These seem to be in the 'affordable" range. There are 500 gig drives available, too, but they are in a much higher price range.

Still ... even if you have to pay 50 cents per gig ... that's not bad and your terabyte will cost you about $500.

 

Looking back, here are some updates:

  • Those "refurbished" disks with the 90-day warranty are still going strong (knock on silicon!).
  • The price of a terabyte of storage has declined quite a bit over the last two years.  A quick look on pricewatch.com shows several choices for 500 gig SATA drives at under $100, and with free shipping!  So, I could buy another terabyte for about $200, compared to $500 two years ago.

Right now I'm looking at building a "Network Attached Storage" or NAS using an old computer.  Perhaps I'll add a couple of large drives and consolidate.  I might even add "RAID" for redundancy and safety.  If I do that, I might even write about it.

Joe

Wanna join the discussion?! Login to your forum account. New Registrations are disabled.

nancyb  
#2 Posted : Sunday, December 2, 2007 5:55:25 AM(UTC)
nancyb

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 53

Please do [write about it].

jncraig  
#3 Posted : Monday, December 31, 2007 5:26:09 AM(UTC)
jncraig

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 561

I've had some additional thoughts about building a "Network Attached Storage" device.  I think that it might must be easier/ simpler/ smarter/ less of a hassle/ etc. to simply have a single computer that is used simply for storage  If all of the storage drives on that computer are shared, then it is a simple matter to "map" those drives to any computer that needs to use them.

I can create separate disks for:

  1. backups
  2. pictures
  3. music
  4. Tivo files
  5. I'm sure that I'll think of something else

And ... if this is just a "regular" windows machine, then I can also run Carbonite on that computer keep a current quality backup that is also an off-site backup.  It'll take a while to create the initial backup (weeks or even a couple of months ...) but this back will grow as needed.  And, should one of my disks fail, recovering it is a relatively easy process.

I can also run other "server" processes on this computer -- like the Tivo server, a music server, and so on ...

I'll add more details as I put this computer/server/storage device together.

Joe
Sacjeanie  
#4 Posted : Tuesday, January 29, 2008 5:19:54 PM(UTC)
Sacjeanie

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 18

I had an interesting conversation with another IT person and they mentioned building a PC with lots of ram, but minimal hard drive space for operating system and basic programs only.  Then connect USB hard drives to the PC so when you do your financial work, etc., the important documents are stored on the removable drives.  When you are done, disconnect your hard drives and put them in a safe or other lockable place.  Mind you, this was during a conversation after talking about a home invasion when someone had lost their laptop with of course, their banking/tax info.

Jeanie

daf323  
#5 Posted : Wednesday, January 30, 2008 3:19:44 PM(UTC)
daf323

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 126

Everyone likes RAM and nice video cards! :)  I could see the buy a backup hard drive and put into fire-proof safe if you have a lotta music/movies/large files of value.  For smaller files and folders that you want to ensure availability in perpetuity for i might consider a service like carbonite.com.

jncraig  
#6 Posted : Wednesday, January 30, 2008 3:29:12 PM(UTC)
jncraig

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 561

Thanks, Dave. 

I was considering writing a separate note about carbonite.com, so I'll just reply. 

For those who have never heard of Carbonite.com, it's a data "backup" service ... not quite a backup because it keeps a mirror copy of your data files.  It costs $50/year per computer.  It's a really good deal, too!

I have a Carbonite subscription for EVERY computer that I own!  That includes the "server" computer with several hundred gigabytes of data.  That's right, I have copied ALL of my CDs to disk, and I play music almost exclusively from disk.

While it does take a while for Carbonite to back up more than about 40 gigs of data, I do have the time.  Once it's done, I don't have to worry.  I have a backup, it's an off-site backup, and I don't worry about fires, water, burglars, etc.

 

Oh ... and extra credit to the person who can tell us what carbonite is ...

Joe
mstigall  
#7 Posted : Thursday, January 31, 2008 2:42:01 PM(UTC)
mstigall

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 32

I'm lazy, and would rather utilize a manufacturer's warranty than debugging/fixing the issue on the hardware. Joe - take a look at http://www.amazon.com/We...cs&qid=1201826081&sr=1-1 to see Western Digital's 2TB external drive.

It supports RAID, automated backups, Firewire + USB connections.... and its self-contained and small enough to take nearly anywhere. For about $600.
Michael Stigall
sc_host  
#8 Posted : Thursday, January 31, 2008 2:56:59 PM(UTC)
sc_host

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 71

I'm not at all opposed to USB or Firewire external drives. When I started this thread (the original message pasted here was written a couple of years ago), I could put one TB into a computer for about $320. Now I can buy a 2 TB external drive for about the same price per TB.

Actually, I believe that with careful shopping you can find similar for a good deal less. I saw an ad recently for a 500 Gig external USB drive at about $90.

And, to be fair, most people don't need a TB, much less 2!

If I were buying a 2TB system, I'd probably be looking to spend a bit more money and go with a networked storage system. You plug it into the network rather than to a computer, and that works if you have more than one computer. And, as I write there are 6+ computers on my home network.

RAID is nice, but that's also overkill for most people.

I've come to appreciate Carbonite's service because it's install and forget. I also like the fact that my data is stored "off site." That offers another layer of protection ...
cigkp  
#9 Posted : Wednesday, March 12, 2008 1:34:51 PM(UTC)
cigkp

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 80

My first computer used CPM for the operating system.  When DOS became available, I purchased an external hard drive with 10MB of storage.  It was about 12" x 12" x 6" high, came in at just under a ton, and cost $1,000.00.  We partitioned it into two drives; one for CPM and the other for DOS.  That was it; we would never ever need more that 10MB.

Ken
jncraig  
#10 Posted : Monday, May 12, 2008 5:46:50 PM(UTC)
jncraig

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 561

Terabytes are getting cheaper!

I just purchased two 500 Gig SATA hard drives for a total of $150. 

I'll probably spend the next few weeks reorganizing my data storage.  There's a strong possibility that one of the drives will end up attached to the still new dual-tuner HD Tivo!

Joe
cigkp  
#11 Posted : Friday, May 30, 2008 5:31:31 PM(UTC)
cigkp

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 80

Petabytes anyone?

Ken
Users browsing this topic
Guest (4)
Forum Jump  
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.

Powered by YAF.NET | YAF.NET © 2003-2024, Yet Another Forum.NET
This page was generated in 0.098 seconds.