I’ve found that modern hard drives tend to be quite reliable for consumer purposes; we’ve come a long way since the bad old days of the Click of Doom.
Their enclosures, not so much. I’ve had three backplanes for external hard drives, from three different manufacturers, fail in as many years. And one cable. But that table won’t give you any information on how common this sort of thing is or how to mitigate your risk.
modern hard drives tend to be quite reliable for consumer purposes
Heh. I’d say the reverse: modern hard drive are not reliable enough for consumer purposes since consumers typically don’t make backups and a failed hard drive is a disaster. They are sufficiently reliable for professional purposes where when a drive fails you just swap in another one and continue as before.
Their enclosures, not so much
Yeah, these are usually cheaply made. But then if an enclosure fails you just get another one and no data is lost or needs to be recovered from backups.
I’ve found that modern hard drives tend to be quite reliable for consumer purposes; we’ve come a long way since the bad old days of the Click of Doom.
Their enclosures, not so much. I’ve had three backplanes for external hard drives, from three different manufacturers, fail in as many years. And one cable. But that table won’t give you any information on how common this sort of thing is or how to mitigate your risk.
Heh. I’d say the reverse: modern hard drive are not reliable enough for consumer purposes since consumers typically don’t make backups and a failed hard drive is a disaster. They are sufficiently reliable for professional purposes where when a drive fails you just swap in another one and continue as before.
Yeah, these are usually cheaply made. But then if an enclosure fails you just get another one and no data is lost or needs to be recovered from backups.
Unless the manufacturer in their infinite wisdom has enabled hardware encryption with the keys stored in the backplane.
Ah. Well...
-- Doctor, it hurts when I do this.
-- Don’t do this, then.
The trouble is that it’s the manufacturer that does it, and the user who gets hurt.
It’s up to the user not to buy broken hardware :-P