Tue Feb 27, 2007 3:46AM EST
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In the wake of Google's eye-opening report on hard drive failure comes this follow-up from Ars Technica, which states rather flat-out that the curious problem of drives that fail without warning isn't going to get better any time soon.
The problem? No one really knows why drives fail, and while certain drives failures can be traced to SMART errors, other variables have been elusive in pinpointing what exactly makes hard drives crash. Even within SMART errors, only a small subset (four, in fact) were found to be of much importance in determining whether a drive was headed south.
Additional information has surfaced, thanks to more expert testimony and another large-scale study, this one from Carnegie Mellon. The results are unfortunately contradictory: The CM study found no special tendency for drives to fail early in their lives, while drives over five years old were found to be 30 times more likely to fail than usual.
But we can debate drive failure causes day and night; unfortunately no one cause (SMART, age, heat) can pinpoint any drive's impending doom with any degree of reliability. The real issue, according to the story, is that no one really much cares about building drives that never crash. Although the piece rightly notes that hard drives have become a kind of disposable commodity (with a two-year lifespan), it doesn't mention that old drives quickly become so limited in capacity relative to their newer brethren that no one wants them, whether they're working or not. So older drives eventually find themselves upgraded, failure or no. Acceptable? Not really. But it's a reality.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Anything Electronic doesn't last these days do to 1. Everything is now built overseas and Quality control isn't as good & 2. Companys don't care when a product fails they expect to sell more of it if you noticed over the years companys went from giving 3 then 2 the 1 now 90 day warrantys on everything. Hard drive are the exception the warranty is still usually 3 years which is good considering the prices of them now. Best solution Backup to CD or DVD that way when your hard drive does crash you have a Backup of You important Documents & Pictures!
Mechanical storage is so outdated, we should all be using fully wireless organic and optical devices for each component and no need for a motherboard to handle data communications to each component, SD memory cards and simple flash with enough capacity should be what operating systems run off of now. We shouldn't even need CD/DVD Media drives or players, it should all be on SD cards already or raw data storage on computers and accessible via internet access on media servers which host the image copies. At this point a DVD drive is good for reading a DVD image data into the computer only to save it on hard drive or memory.
If you use quality drives, the failure rate is actually very low with an adverage life of 3, not 2, year. Some of course last longer and other shorter. This holds true for other parts as well, for example quality RAM has almost zero failure rate and the only bad flash drive failure I have had with the ones I carry was due to mis-sorting and a known bad device was shipped with the failure sticker and all.
The guy who posted this obviously must not know a lot about technology. Hard drives crash because they have to be ABSOLUTELY flawless. Everything inside of the hard drive itself is very precise. A spec of dust can cause a hard drive to fail. This is because the head on the arm 'floats' above the platters on the air circulated around the drive from the spindles. Heat is also a factor; there are no electronics that are resistant to heat! You must provide good airflow to all components and keep your fans, and cabinet clean. (this will dramatically increase your computers life span.)Vibration, and shocks to the drive can help it fail. Hard drives also crash from simple minor imperfections when they are made. I would say from my experience, that Seagate drives would be the best, or Fujitsu. I've actually opened a small 7GB Seagate just for the fun of it and it still was running XP efficiently. And usually hard drives crash whenever you open them. I must agree with atsfjohn, hard drives are WAY too slow nowadays for the current CPU speeds we have today. Most of the lag you have on a machine are from the hard drive searching for files. **BE SURE TO BACK UP YOUR FILES, CLEAN YOUR CABINET AND FANS, AND MOST OF ALL KEEP YOUR HD DEFRAGMENTED!**
I have stopped using Maxtor Drives not due to failure but because of difficulties in keeping them in sync in a raid array while my WD's just hum along. I have finally converted all of my computers in my systen to Raid 1 arrays. All O/S and programs are on one array in any given machine and all data is on a second array. I havent lost but one drive in the last three years and that was about two months ago. No problems. I simply loaded another drive and mirrored the other on and then replaced the one still working as both drives were over five years old by then.
We run a website called AmericanVice.com. It features over 600 high quality adult DVDs. As a professional who stores terabytes of data for a living, I deal with the frustrations of hard drives. The best solution is to always keep two copies of your data in separate physical locations.
Does anybody know of any good free hard drive recovery software? My HDD crashed and Im using another one with XP on it. I have that one on master and the other one as a slave.
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6 Posted by donlindsay59 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:46PM EDT Report Abuse
The trick to not have any failures is simple: 1. Buy only RETAIL BOXED components with long warranties 2. Buy only major brand for drives CPUs, motherboards, and memory... Seagate, Western Digital, Maxtor, Hitachi and Intel (Do not use AMD) Apacer, Crucial, Samsung 3. Do not put a PC on a table where people slam the desk and all energy is transferred into the rotating hard drive. 4. Build your own, stay away from Major brands like Dell and Gateway the use cheap components(oem parts) (I have statistics on my side to back up this info)