Oh, yes, redundancy, not striping - raid 1. Been a while since thinking about raid, opps. One goes boom, the system still boots and has a copy of your stuff, hopefully telling you in a useful way to replace the one that died. Expect the ssd to die. That asus laptop with the uefi bios actually shipped with 2x 256gb ssd's in raid-0 oddly, so one dies, it all goes poof. Weird to see that on a consumer device, but I redid it as redundant raid-1. My current dell latitude -mb On 04/19/2016 12:39 PM, Matt Graham wrote: > On 2016-04-19 10:15, Michael Butash wrote: > [snippage] >>> WD Black 7200 Rpm 1TB DATA drive >> See above, spinners die too. Raid-0 any volume set imho. > > I Think You Meant "RAID-1". Specifically, software RAID-1 so you can > use the array with any motherboard. The 0 in RAID-0 is your % chance > of recovering data from an array with a single-disk failure :-) > >> Consider just getting an external nas like Synology or Drobo to keep >> data on, backups, etc. I just keep os disks in my system, and >> consider that disposable as a /tmp drive. > > This may help, but storage media of all types can fail--usually at the > least convenient moment. Regular backups to something offline (USB > disk, DVD-R, BD-R, tape ...) are the best way to prevent actual data > loss. 2 USB disks of sufficient size, rotated periodically, with a > small shell script that mounts the disk, rsyncs the dirs you care > about to the disk, and umounts the disk is a fairly convenient and > fast way to do this. (Initial sync takes forever, but later syncs > should be much faster.) Unfortunately, USB disks are not $0. > --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss