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    Help regarding an External Drive…

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    • M
      MajorBojangles
      last edited by
      M
      spiral
      MajorBojangles
      spiral

      Can anyone give me a recommendation for a decent priced (and efficient) external hard drive? I've nearly filled my company issued Macbook near maximum capacity with anime and other random shenanigans; I'd rather hold on to them than resort to massive obliteration. Help me, o' kind denizens of the AP forums.

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      • M
        MajorBojangles
        last edited by
        M
        spiral
        MajorBojangles
        spiral

        Ah, my noobishness just shone, for starting this thread in the wrong area. Gah.

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        • Cap'n Carter
          Cap'n Carter
          last edited by
          Cap'n Carter
          spiral
          Cap'n Carter
          spiral

          I got a pretty good external HD for like 100 dollars

          it holds like 300 gigs

          the bigot who thinks being an asshole is actually worth shit

          M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • M
            MajorBojangles @Cap'n Carter
            @Cap'n Carter last edited by
            M
            spiral
            MajorBojangles
            spiral

            Brand? Make? Place?

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            • The Dude
              The Dude
              last edited by
              The Dude
              spiral
              The Dude
              spiral

              Here's what you do. Goto newegg.com and buy a regular HD to go in a computer. I bought a 500 gig for under $100.
              Then buy an enclosure for said drive. They can range from $20-30. I have a Metal Gear Box, it's very nice and conserves space.
              So basically you can buy a nice external for under $150. Plus, it's more reliable than say a Lycie or a Maxtor. Fully customizable, it's great.

              buttcheeks

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              • M
                MajorBojangles
                last edited by
                M
                spiral
                MajorBojangles
                spiral

                Just checked out the site–very nice, very nice. Thanks, Mr. Dude.

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                • captain usopp
                  captain usopp
                  last edited by
                  captain usopp
                  spiral
                  captain usopp
                  spiral

                  so I asume, the HD would plug in to this external enclosure thing, and then you can plug in the enclosure via USB, just like a regular external HD. cool. I'll have to try this. Hey, can you find these enclosures in stores? I like to see stuff before I buy it.

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                  • Bounty1Berry
                    Bounty1Berry
                    last edited by
                    Bounty1Berry
                    spiral
                    Bounty1Berry
                    spiral

                    Yes, you can find them in shops. If you have a shop like Micro Centre or Fry's Electronics locally, you'll probably have a better chance of getting one than at say, Best Buy. Other shops are more prone to sell a fully-assembled packaged unit)

                    One thing you might look into is what connections are available:

                    eSATA > FireWire 800 > USB 2.0 ~=~ Firewire 400 > USB 1.1

                    USB 2.0 is the most prevalant option, and if you drag it to your old Celeron 400 box, it will fall back to USB 1.1 speeds. Macintoshes generally offer both USB and Firewire.

                    Sometimes you can get a drive carrier which supports eSATA AND USB 2.0 AND/OR FireWire.

                    Generally, the enclosures which take 3.5" hard drives (desktop size) also require a power brick.

                    You can sometimes get ones with 2.5" (laptop size) drives inside which will run entirely off USB, but laptop drives cost more per gig and are slower.

                    It's also a great way to reuse drives if you upgrade– I put my 160Gb drive in one when I upgraded to a 250Gb drive (primarily because I needed a SATA drive for a new mainboard, and the price difference was tiny)

                    J captain usopp 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • J
                      jobebob @Bounty1Berry
                      @Bounty1Berry last edited by
                      J
                      spiral
                      jobebob
                      spiral

                      Another cool thing about firewire is that you can run your system on it, unlike usb. Also firewire tend to be better at everything than usb.

                      http://one-piece.manga-read.net All OP eps and manga up and ready to be leeched. ![](images/smilies/ipb/ninja.png "Ninja")

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                      • Gorlom
                        Gorlom
                        last edited by
                        Gorlom
                        spiral
                        Gorlom
                        spiral

                        make sure the new drive don't run on FAT32… (was really annoying finding out i needed to remove ~30gig i just put on my new external when i already filled up the empty space i got on the regular HD.)

                        For some reason the instruction book was very vague about which system it was using. And lacking both instructions and knowledge how to easily reformat I assumed it was ready to use.

                        Originally Posted by Ivotas

                        What the…? Holy smurf am I slow! Until this statement of yours I never even realized that an octopus is actually serving octopusballs. Talk about not seeing the forest because of too many trees. facepalm

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                        • captain usopp
                          captain usopp @Bounty1Berry
                          @Bounty1Berry last edited by
                          captain usopp
                          spiral
                          captain usopp
                          spiral

                          @Bounty1Berry:

                          One thing you might look into is what connections are available:

                          eSATA > FireWire 800 > USB 2.0 ~=~ Firewire 400 > USB 1.1

                          USB 2.0 is the most prevalant option, and if you drag it to your old Celeron 400 box, it will fall back to USB 1.1 speeds. Macintoshes generally offer both USB and Firewire.

                          Sometimes you can get a drive carrier which supports eSATA AND USB 2.0 AND/OR FireWire.

                          @_@ oh god. now i'm in over my head. XD maybe I should just stick with an Ex HD and save myself the headache. not like I need it atm anyways.

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