Physical Hard-Disk Data Arrangements and Drive Failures?
Tadau asks: "Knowing not much of the low-level and molecular aspects of a hard drive platter, I'm wondering if it is possible to cause a weight change/imbalance on a hard drive platter by say writing solid 1's to approximately 1/2 of a side of the platter? If there is a weight change, then could that attribute to drive vibrations by an ever-so-slightly unbalanced platter, which may result in an eventual drive failure?"
The answer is yes. If you write all 1's to one side of a drive, and all 0's to the other side, the drive will eventually fail.
-- I have monkeys in my pants.
No.
If you could however write all 1's to all the harddrives in the Southern Hemisphere it would likely cause a polarity shift on the earth however. (AF)
to an online utility and an explanation of how it works Hard Drive Balancer
Meddle thou not in the affairs of Dragons, for thou art crunchy and with most anything.
If all the hardrives were ones it would have the north and south poles more defined and the hard drive would cave in to itself.
heh ... no, an electron has mass. Photons have no mass. Nor do Photon torpedoes. They do all their damage by making the enemy assume they've been impatcted (bright lights and all that), and computer systems just assume they've been hit and fail. It's funny to watch the expressions on the faces of the remaining Klingons after they've been "hit" with a Photon torpedo, then just as they're about to get all pissed off, you hit them with an electron torpedo. Then the fun really starts!
Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. (Einstein)
PHB: This laptop computer weighs too much. Do we have anything lighter?
Wally: Why don't you just delete files to lower the weight on that one?
PHB (curiously studying laptop): That's a thought.
Wally: Technically, I only asked why not.
Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
Once a year, (traditionally, the first day in April) all disk and tape drives were rebalanced by redistibruting ones and zeroes. The "bit buckets" were also emptied on this hallowed day.
This isn't a problem anymore because all modern recording media use "MFM", "RLL", or "GCR" encoding methods, where ones and zeroes are automatically balanced.
One minor technical nit: "ones" actually weigh less than "zeroes". This led to the conclusion that the more data you put on your punched cards, the less they cost to mail :-)