Calculating the Mean Time Between Failures?
Blue Booger asks: "I was looking over some fibrechannel hard drives and noticed that the Mean Time Between Failures was rated at 1.2 million hours. I thought that was pretty high, and figured it up to be close to 137 YEARS!! I went to check some regular IDE drives just for comparison, and they were rated at 500,000 hours (57 years). Now, as I understand it, this is supposed to be the average time that you can expect the drive to last before failures. I rarely have an IDE drive last more than 4 years, and my record is 10 years, so what is the deal? BTW, that is 57 years running 24 hours a day...the MTBF is rated as power on time. Here you can find Western Digital's glossary that defines the term MTBF (pdf). Here you can find a spec sheet on one of their 20GB IDE drives. I checked, and Seagate also lists similar MTBFs. How the heck are they coming up with these numbers?"
Just make Some Wild Ass Guess(SWAG).
Like, my hrad drive has a MTBF of 300,000 hours.
Calculating the Mean Time Between Failures?
I prefer to measure time by the emergence of one integral anomoly to the next.
Informatus Technologicus
DISCLAIMER: The views expressed hereafter are not necessarily those of MENSA, which I am only a member of.
Shouldn't that be "The views expressed hereafter are not necessarily those of MENSA, of which I am only a member." I would think proper grammar usage would be a prerequisite for being a MENSA member.
Yoda of Borg am I! Assimilated shall you be! Futile resistance is, hmm?
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There are no karma whores, only moderation johns
Whatever happened to *NICE* time between failure?
Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.
I'm sure our resident expert is more than willing to help.
Use ISO 8601 dates [YYYY-MM-DD]