ioSafe says its new drive is “engineered to protect data from fire (up to 1,400 degrees Fahrenheit or 760 degrees Celsius) and flood (full immersion in fresh or salt water).”
ioSafe have managed to do this by putting a 2.5-inch hard drive into a 3.5-inch disk enclosure, making the size compatible with 3.5-inch drive bays. The space between the 3.5-inch enclosure and the 2.5-inch drive is where the ioSafe protection against fire and water technology lies, while also “resolving heat dissipation issues found in all computer systems.”
The protection is question features a “FloSafe cooling vent technology provides air-flow cooling to dissipate heat during normal operation” which can also “detect destructive heat levels and automatically close the vents to protect data from extreme heat.” link
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In the event of a hard drive failure, virus, or natural disaster, there are options that you can use to recover your data. The most popular are data recovery technicians and data recovery software. For businesses and corporations, technicians are the preferred way to go. Technicians can recover your files, even rebuild your hard drive if they need to. In the event of a hardware problem, the software won’t be able to do much for you. From viruses to crashes, data recovery can restore the files on your hard drive by rebuilding the platters and the structure of the drive. A hard disk is venerable for mechanical damages and the data in the hard disk gets lost or corrupted. Hard drive is a primary storage device of a computer. It comprises of magnetic disks upon which the information and data is recorded. These magnetic tapes are segmented into partitions and blocks. Normally, when the computer crashes due to a mechanical failure then data loss occurs segment wise. Or if you delete some data then the new data that you save gets written over the deleted data. We expected to see escalating solid state drive capacities at the Big Show (you know, in the 128GB to 256GB range), but nothing like the insane amount of storage that BitMicro announced: a whopping 832GB SSD. link DIY Software Segment Apple needs to be applauded for changing the game. Innovative designs have made consumers look at laptops (and other gadgets) in a different light. However style sometimes comes at a cost to substance. Take for example the rising cases of failed hard drives in MacBooks. A number of complaints have surface over Seagate 2.5" notebook drive manufactured in China to have an above average failure rate. Now this certainly does not put Apple completely to blame as Seagate makes the drives however Apple is the big name and hence gets all of the media attention. They just picked the wrong hard drive manufacturer to team up with. If you've been fortunate enough, you've never had to go through data recovery. But you will someday. Hard drives will fail, it's just a given. They aren't built to last forever, I don't think anything is. I don't know why there's an expectation that hard drives should be any different. Hard drives aren't built from some magical indestructible material. You should backup your data on a regular basis. Your hard drive will fail so be prepared or you'll be facing the prospect of data recovery sooner than you think. Once you realize your hard drive has developed some problems you should check your backups. Failed hard drive: check! Did not backup your data: check! Business proposal due tomorrow: check! Time to panic: double check! |
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