prathapml Posted August 16, 2005 Share Posted August 16, 2005 1. They just plain dont have good HDDs! Its not any blame on the NTFS.2. My system needs screaming louder. The faster it runs, the better i like it. 3. I get far more control over my system with NTFS.4. NTFS is much better, in all ways (including performance), and its what we use for all systems under our care. And I've been working with ntfs over 6 years.4. You can access your NTFS partitions very well, thru boot-up disks (bartPE, NTFSdos, etc.) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ripken204 Posted August 16, 2005 Author Share Posted August 16, 2005 also if they need someone to fix their comp they obviously they dont know alot about how to make ur comp fast and how to keep it clean from viruses,adawre,etc. those things make ur comp slow so thats why theirs is slower than your. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mitchellovision Posted August 17, 2005 Share Posted August 17, 2005 Currently I have a 40 gig hard rive...but soon I hope to get a 250 gig hard rive...and keep my 40 gig for Windows Me. The 250 gig will be for Vista when it comes out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Biohead Posted August 17, 2005 Share Posted August 17, 2005 I only have a 30 gigger. And I only bought it not so long ago. Even at that size i've partitioned it to a 12 and 15, one for xp one for vista.Each is only half full and I can't see it getting any bigger than that. If I want a bigger one i'll buy an external because I ain't forking out 80 quid for an 80 gig 2.5" laptop model. It's a rip off I think. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sonu27 Posted August 18, 2005 Share Posted August 18, 2005 20GBI have only used 6GB.Music, Office. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pikea Posted August 19, 2005 Share Posted August 19, 2005 Recording stuff of the TV quickly eats space. A weekly 30 min show ends up about 180Mb, most series of stuff are like 20 episodes, there's 3.6Gb!A few shows a week that you want to record, a few seasons later just imagine the size!Take the Simpsons for example, what's it on like the 16th season? I can only guess that it's about 20-30Gb!My discs:500Gb raid, 200 Gb fitted in external caddy, 80 Gb system and applications and there's a 80 and 60 Gb ones left lurking from old computers that don't really have a use just yet. Probably backup could be an idea!Does put me a 80 Gb short of 1TB ...ooh found a 5 year old 10 Gb one, only 70 to go...!!I remember a friend having a 512 Mb hard drive which you could get Windows 98, Word, Excel and one game at a time on it! If we wanted to play a new one you had to unistall the previous! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ripken204 Posted August 19, 2005 Author Share Posted August 19, 2005 thats why dvd's were made, lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pikea Posted August 19, 2005 Share Posted August 19, 2005 But who can be bothered to burn them Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
big poppa pump Posted August 19, 2005 Share Posted August 19, 2005 Computer 12*74 gb raptor raid 0.2*500 7k500 deskstar on raid 0.2*250 gb maxtor 8mb external.Computer22*36gig raptor raid 0 on computer 2*250 gb maxtor 16mb on raid 0.1*120 gb maxtor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rikgale Posted August 19, 2005 Share Posted August 19, 2005 I got a 36Gb Raptor, 80Gb Maxtor and 200Gb WD in my main machine. Windows, Program Files, Games and Profiles are on the Raptor. Also the Raptor is used to temp store nlite ISOs as these ISOs are run from there.The 200GB WD was is a replacement data drive for the 80Gb which was getting very cramped with all my Music, Docs, OS ISOs, Utils and Install files, UACD files and game backups.The 80Gb is now a scratch disc for the Page File, VMWare harddiscs and a dump for files that I want to deleted but think I might need to keep them for a bit, but don't want them in there orginal folders.Also packing a 400Gb NAS (DS-101 Diskstation), and a multi-purpose server with 1 x120Gb and 1 x250Gb, both of which have backups of the main machine on. And a test bed with an 80Gb HD, cuz I could not find anything smaller/cheaper. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DonDamm Posted August 19, 2005 Share Posted August 19, 2005 Whatever I have isn't enough!! I've two 120s, a 160 and just added a 250. I'm thinking of switching to an array of 300s. I keep all current programs and and various OS installations available on the network. I tend to keep both an English version and a German version of OSs like Server 3003 in std, Web and Enterprise, WinXP home and Pro, etc, Mandriva, Ubuntu, yada yada. Then there are the virtual machines of which I normally have six or seven at any given time. Then there are the images for copying, install files for unattended setups and the iso images which are made from them. Pr0n doesn't even enter into it!Of course, I need my fix of English speaking TV shows like CSI, 24, Numbers, and the like. I usually get the whole season before I back it all up to a DVD.Nope. I'd fold up and die with just 40GB. My OS and programs take up about 8 GB and the back up image fits nicely on one DVD. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rnielsen151 Posted October 11, 2005 Share Posted October 11, 2005 @rnielsen151:3684gigs.........you're the man.Are you running out of disk space? LOL<{POST_SNAPBACK}>You got all that size, but do you know how to use it?The HD, that is.I mean that device with the shiney round things and the head...I give up.Yes I know how to use it, and the Hard Drive also....lolChange of config....I keep all my CD/DVD ISO files on HDD, I hate have stacks of disc laying around.....I mostly virtual drive them to install then unmount. On a mirrored RAID so they are safe and cannot get scratched.I only keep a few CDs in my office.1. Unattended WinXP disc2. Barts PE Utility Disc3. Server 03 x64 Standard4. Suse Live DVD Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
suryad Posted October 11, 2005 Share Posted October 11, 2005 Bigger hdds = more data per area of hdd = more performance from hdd!And Dirtwarrior you girlfriend is wrong!!! SIZE DOES MATTER! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Clint Posted October 11, 2005 Share Posted October 11, 2005 (edited) Bigger hdds = more data per area of hdd = more performance from hdd!And Dirtwarrior you girlfriend is wrong!!! SIZE DOES MATTER!Sure does, but that goes for both parts...for some reason all focus is on one of them...is the bolt to small or is the nut to big? Edited October 11, 2005 by Clint Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeremy Posted October 11, 2005 Share Posted October 11, 2005 Both very well balanced, hangin' strong! lmfao Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now