Archive - General Tech Category

HDD (Hard Disk Drive) Failure Rates – Should you worry about it?

Friday, October 16th, 2009

I was on slickdeals the other day where there was a lengthy discussion about how this drive could fail due to having 5 platters and therefore produced more heat and was “supposedly” more likely to fail.

Should you be worried about it? Basically yes and no. I have had a few drives fail on me in the past, all of different brands. Some hard drives are more likely to fail than others, depending on the build quality, but basically any drive can fail at any time. Usually even if you weren’t keeping great backups of all your info you still should be able to recover most of it, but maybe not. All my drives that failed had to do with corruption. I lost no data really.

That particular drive (The 2TB Hitachi) I did purchase because I need to replace a corrupt drive. I leave my computer on almost 24/7. I have some fairly heavy hardware though and I haven’t had an issue. Some Dell computers might not be able to put up with it, since they can barely withstand running something like Prime95.

If you’re really worried about your data then you should get server class hard drives and make backups regularly. Desktop grade drives just aren’t built to last as much.

Don’t worry about drive failure too much, if it happens it happens, deal with it then :)

SideNote: I’ll probably never be able to fill that 2TB drive but I’ll try :)

Building a MediaBox

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

I’ve had this issue for a long time, I always want to play videos in xvid, ogg, mpeg, mkv, whatever on my TV without having to convert them to anything. I would also like to have a DVR. How about also being able to play any kind of emulator on my TV with a PC game pad? Full Internet access & connected to the LAN so I can grab files from my main PC. Could this be possible? You bet. My answer to the issue is building a mediabox.

So far this is what I’ve come up with. I’m using a mini-pc design, I just hope everything is actually able to fit in the box. The reason why I need the cheap video card is for s-video and overall better quality.mediabox

The total cost for everything with shipping would be around $400 or so. Randomly going over the specifications, CPU: Intel Atom Dual Core Ram: 2GB HD: 500GB Video Card: Radeon 7000 PCI, TV Capture Card: WinTV USB2.0, KB/Mouse: Wireless Logitech.

I’ll install Windows/Linux through a USB cd-rw drive that I have already. As far as DVD playback goes, I might be able to use the drive on my PC to stream the DVD over the LAN to the box, or I could just use my PS2 for DVD playback. (Another option would be to just buy an external USB DVD drive.)

According to the specs on the JetWay box, it should be able to fit one 3.5″ hard drive and fit the PCI video card. However, I’m not really sure that everything will fit. Anyway, that’s the current plan, but I’m still tweaking it a bit, and I’m not sure whether I will run windows or Linux on it. I believe either one would be capable. However, it might just be “easier” to go with Windows in case there is some compatibility issues with the hardware.

If you’re curious about the TV this will be connecting to, it’s a 42″ Plasma EDTV.

Old Tech Rememberance

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

On occasion I find myself looking at old computers on the Internet, and wonder what it would be like to live back in those times with a DOS computer or a Commodore 64. I have looked back farther than that, and there are some really interesting computers, that filled entire rooms. That’s mainly because they were using vacuum tubes instead of transistors. Current processors use 200 Million+ transistors each. That’s a lot, it’s no wonder vacuum tubes took entire buildings to make such a slow processor. Vacuum tubes are big and bulky, and they died rather easily.

The invention of the transistor in 1947 changed things forever. Right now it’s more of a “how small can we make the transistors”. Well they’re making them super small, seeing as they can fit 4 processor cores or more on a single chip. I find all this very impressive. We’ve come a long way with processors, but still have a long way to go. There’s no telling what computers and processors will be able to do in the future.

I for one am glad to be alive and able to witness some of the advancements. My first computer had about 233MHz and Windows 95. At the time, it was supposed to be a “top of the line” computer gaming system. That was when I was 6 or 7, and I’m still young at only 18 and guess what I’m running a quad core processor with 2.4 GHz power on each core with 4GB of memory. Quite astounding the advancement in such a short period of time.

When I was born, the Internet was just getting started. Didn’t even quite form yet, and look at it now. It’s enormous, and growing every day. This is what makes me happy to be alive, technology is almost my life force. Without computers, I guess I’d be tinkering with radios or printers. Printing machines used to be enormous and required some one with quite a lot of knowledge to maintain them.

Anyway that’s my rant for today. You bet I’m a technology geek, and I’m proud of it.