Priscilla_June
Naughty Worldbuilder
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2022
- Posts
- 806
100% why I never use google products for anything related to erotica
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I've just been reading a book about the history of Mesopotamia. Those clay tablets have managed quite well.I recognize that no storage is forever. (I remember in working with spy files when microfiche was the latest, "lives forever," failed attempt at that.)
In the mid 60s, as a summer job for three summers, I helped clean up the CIA's manually indexed foreign spy ID files and convert them to punch cards for the UNIVAC computer system. (Why they hired college kids to have this access and not fully cleared staffers is beyond me.) Luckily, they kept the manual file running in parallel, because when they activated the UNIVAC system, it ate up all the cards and retrieved nothing.I've just been reading a book about the history of Mesopotamia. Those clay tablets have managed quite well.
To be technical, a thumb drive or memory card is basically a solid state harddrive, principle wise, at least. The first time I heard of them was trying to find out what happened to my ipod mini, to find the hdd in them was prone to failure and there was ssd replacements. I think by the time I got it, one or two ipod gens had came out, also the first time I saw power banks--I kept a disposable one permanately plugged into it because of it's short battery life.Isn't telling people to "definitely invest in an SSD instead of an HDD" in contradiction of then following that up by telling us how HDDs are less susceptible to that "bit rot"? I mean, at work, we have thirty-year-old HDDs in the shelves that, if needed, still work perfectly. Somehow, I have trouble believing that SSDs have a similar lifetime (though, I admit, that's mainly because SSDs haven't been around long enough to proof me wrong).
Yep. Few years ago I had a 1tb Seagate that just randomly failed one day. It was either a Seagate, or a different commonplace one. It had movies, anime, standup on it because I ran out of room on another, that I still have today. I only had it about a month and it stopped booting. Somebody said it was because of the brand. It was about $40 which wasn't bad for around 2013. I've seen 80g thumbdrives for more money in the last few years.Sort of. The trouble is that the risks of using older HDDs generally outweigh the risks of bit rot. Bit rot as an issue is actually very rare, and it can be mitigated. Older HDDs, meanwhile, are far more likely to fail outright or become damaged than SSDs. They can also become incompatible as the tech world marches on forward, which is a pain.
And you are right about lifetimes. SSDs do have limited lifespans. Not in terms of how old they are, but how many times they have been used. With enough writes, the memory cells will become unreliable, and they will stop working. The average consumer, though, will never reach that point of failure. Modern SSDs can last up to 100,000 write cycles. That means for my 2TB SSD I could write 200,000,000 gigabytes of data.
Writing data aside, manufacturers also often include a number called an MTBF, which generally indicates how reliable an SSD will be over time. Nowadays this usually sits around 1.5 million operational hours. You're more likely with both SSDs and HDDs to just hit a random, absolute failure in the system than you are to reach the natural end of their lifespan.
So, yeah - solely to prevent bit rot, a modern SSD might not be the best way to go. But for the greatest blanket of insurance, it usually is (remember, bit rot is very rare). I'm far from an expert, but there is loads of research around for people to look into. Just be careful about what you choose to store your notes on!
People still trusting the tyrant google in 2024 is hilarious.
It's not so much "people trusting Google" as "nothing is 100% trustworthy and we have to choose between a variety of imperfect options".
Oh dear! I think Seagate is a little bit hit or miss. Super good prices compared to almost any other brand, but of course at a cost…Yep. Few years ago I had a 1tb Seagate that just randomly failed one day. It was either a Seagate, or a different commonplace one. It had movies, anime, standup on it because I ran out of room on another, that I still have today. I only had it about a month and it stopped booting. Somebody said it was because of the brand. It was about $40 which wasn't bad for around 2013. I've seen 80g thumbdrives for more money in the last few years.
Sure, but a cloud like google drive is far far far less perfect than just keeping your own backups.
I've yet to have a problem with Drive. I've had more problems with Microsoft Word/One Drive. I found out my phone has Docs, and Google was nice enough to put my works in it for me, but I don't use it. I tried to at least organize it, but there's no real way to do it, since everything is just... there... like if you dropped a file folder in your living room.Sure, but a cloud like google drive is far far far less perfect than just keeping your own backups.
You can organize documents using Google Drive, but viewing them in Google Docs shows everything in a flat folder. It's kind of annoying.I tried to at least organize it, but there's no real way to do it, since everything is just... there... like if you dropped a file folder in your living room.