I always add an entry to my calendar at the same time I mail off a rebate. If it says 4-6 weeks, the calendar entry is for 8 weeks out. I put the rebate confirmation number (if online) and all the details on the event entry.
That's true. Writing to the sector will remap it. But if you get a bad sector, it's very rare for it to remain an isolated incident. And it may not be the sector, but rather the head that's actually failing. I usually consider the drive a likely loss by this point. After doing a full backup, I'll run the drive manufacturer's utility to scan the disk and remap sectors and then write zeroes to the drive for good measure. If all is OK after that, I can always clone my backup back onto the drive.
On Linux, I just use smartmontools. Gives the same grid of data (mostly) as Crystal Disk Info. But when copying a failing drive, always use ddrescue. It will allow you to unplug the drive (to do some mysterious temporary fix like putting it back in the freezer) and plug it back in and restart from where you left off. Unless you only need a small amount of data (I prefer to just clone the entire system to a new drive to boot from).
At the first sign of trouble? How much earlier should I do it? I'm not saying in place of a backup. Just as a quicker way to get a new drive up and running.
Also, generally you don't need to panic over this attribute. You should panic when it increases steadily.
True, I've had a few drives hold steady at 1 sector reallocated. But if Current Pending Sector count remains non-zero for very long, it's a headache at the very least and probably a failure. Generally, it seems like as soon as you crest zero, it's over. I've had the next symptom be a totally unresponsive drive. But doing the backup when you hit 1 (admittedly overly cautious) will force the drive to read off all the sectors and you'll at least get your backup while you verify the rest of the drive still reads OK.
A few of them aren't accounted for very well (and some of Samsung's stats are not accumulative stats). Crystal Disk Info makes it idiot-proof. If the square is blue, the drive is fine, yellow and the drive is probably failing soon, and red is a definite failure.
Raw value of zero is good. If Current Pending Sector Count or Reallocated Sector Count go above zero, you're likely dealing with a failing drive.
And I can confirm. Reallocated Sector Count rarely goes above zero when the drive is fine. It's possible to have a few sectors go bad and get reallocated, but it's usually part of a bigger problem when it happens (this number is reset to zero at the factory, after all initially bad sectors have been remapped). If the Current Pending Sector Count is non-zero, it's likely over.
I always clone a drive immediately with ddrescue when it gets to this point, while the drive is still working.
Completely missed my point. GP post was talking about the cost of a specific tire changing based on there being a middle man. I'm not talking about different brands/models.
I would love if some other company took over making something like the Zalman ZM-VE200. A hard drive that can do a virtual CD-ROM from ISO files. There have been some flash drives that do this, but none that have the storage capacity I was looking for.
Really, I'd like to see one of these that would do a virtual hard drive for EFI booting of OS X images or Windows 8.
That really just sounds like they are outsourcing the audio processing to a company that actually sells those services. They don't have their own speech recognition engine, presumably, and don't self-host the software.
How can it even ignore "Do Not Track"? That's a client setting, not a server setting. If the client doesn't give an option to set "Do Not Track" then how is the client "ignoring" it?
A laptop with a wireless mouse (and wireless keyboard that I almost never need, except when Netflix decides to log me out) beats every interface I've seen so far.
Roku's Netflix interface is nice - and there's a smartphone app to search/select content not already on your list.
This needs modded to +6. He has no valid claim.
Google Voice: press 4. Of course you have to find a way to make them call you...
I always add an entry to my calendar at the same time I mail off a rebate. If it says 4-6 weeks, the calendar entry is for 8 weeks out. I put the rebate confirmation number (if online) and all the details on the event entry.
The person who initiates a class action usually gets a pretty good payout, too.
That's true. Writing to the sector will remap it. But if you get a bad sector, it's very rare for it to remain an isolated incident. And it may not be the sector, but rather the head that's actually failing. I usually consider the drive a likely loss by this point. After doing a full backup, I'll run the drive manufacturer's utility to scan the disk and remap sectors and then write zeroes to the drive for good measure. If all is OK after that, I can always clone my backup back onto the drive.
On Linux, I just use smartmontools. Gives the same grid of data (mostly) as Crystal Disk Info. But when copying a failing drive, always use ddrescue. It will allow you to unplug the drive (to do some mysterious temporary fix like putting it back in the freezer) and plug it back in and restart from where you left off. Unless you only need a small amount of data (I prefer to just clone the entire system to a new drive to boot from).
At the first sign of trouble? How much earlier should I do it? I'm not saying in place of a backup. Just as a quicker way to get a new drive up and running.
I realize that. But I always make a clone first, because it's a lot of wear and runtime if the drive is actually failing.
Also, generally you don't need to panic over this attribute. You should panic when it increases steadily.
True, I've had a few drives hold steady at 1 sector reallocated. But if Current Pending Sector count remains non-zero for very long, it's a headache at the very least and probably a failure. Generally, it seems like as soon as you crest zero, it's over. I've had the next symptom be a totally unresponsive drive. But doing the backup when you hit 1 (admittedly overly cautious) will force the drive to read off all the sectors and you'll at least get your backup while you verify the rest of the drive still reads OK.
A few of them aren't accounted for very well (and some of Samsung's stats are not accumulative stats). Crystal Disk Info makes it idiot-proof. If the square is blue, the drive is fine, yellow and the drive is probably failing soon, and red is a definite failure.
Raw value of zero is good. If Current Pending Sector Count or Reallocated Sector Count go above zero, you're likely dealing with a failing drive.
Most of the numbers are not important.
And I can confirm. Reallocated Sector Count rarely goes above zero when the drive is fine. It's possible to have a few sectors go bad and get reallocated, but it's usually part of a bigger problem when it happens (this number is reset to zero at the factory, after all initially bad sectors have been remapped). If the Current Pending Sector Count is non-zero, it's likely over.
I always clone a drive immediately with ddrescue when it gets to this point, while the drive is still working.
Less warranty replacement.
Completely missed my point. GP post was talking about the cost of a specific tire changing based on there being a middle man. I'm not talking about different brands/models.
But that's not the same tire, but bought through a middle-man.
There is no Evergreen Terrace in Wichita. But 34 Evergreen Terrace does exist in Springfield. Just a few blocks down from The Simpsons.
The cost of a tire was at least 30% higher the last time I checked, although YMMV.
Is there really a correlation between the varying retail price of a tire and its mileage?
The first Target store was opened in 1962 in Roseville, Minnesota.
And Nintendo already recommended an age of 6 before using 3D mode.
I would love if some other company took over making something like the Zalman ZM-VE200. A hard drive that can do a virtual CD-ROM from ISO files. There have been some flash drives that do this, but none that have the storage capacity I was looking for.
Really, I'd like to see one of these that would do a virtual hard drive for EFI booting of OS X images or Windows 8.
and my wife's parrot can accurately whistle the theme to Castle
Please, post this to Youtube...or Snappamatic.
Not to ruin your fun, but Nuclear Regulation Authority.
That really just sounds like they are outsourcing the audio processing to a company that actually sells those services. They don't have their own speech recognition engine, presumably, and don't self-host the software.
You get much more control.
Except for maybe remote control...which is a simple but major reason why people buy a TV.
How can it even ignore "Do Not Track"? That's a client setting, not a server setting. If the client doesn't give an option to set "Do Not Track" then how is the client "ignoring" it?
A laptop with a wireless mouse (and wireless keyboard that I almost never need, except when Netflix decides to log me out) beats every interface I've seen so far.
Roku's Netflix interface is nice - and there's a smartphone app to search/select content not already on your list.