High-Capacity PCMCIA Drives for Backup? 65
jspivack asks: "My dad is looking for a very portable backup system for his laptop. He's tired of going without his apps and data for days on end when it goes down - and since it's a laptop, anything from trackpad to screen to USB port problems means sending the whole computer in for repair. I figured this would be the perfect use for a high-capacity PCMCIA hard drive: he could just keep it in his slot and make a nightly carbon-copy of his main HD. No external messiness to deal with. And if his machine goes down, he just pops out the drive and pops it into a loaner machine. The problem is, I've googled around and it would seem that Toshiba only makes PCMCIA drives in a 5GB flavor, despite the fact that they have 1.8" drives going to 60GB. Have I missed some other high-capacity (>=20Gb) -internal- PCMCIA drives (Google's not perfect, and neither am I)?
Does anyone know if I could buy a 5GB PCMCIA drive and a larger 'embedded' drive and just swap the larger drive itself into the PCMCIA interface portion of the smaller drive? I know it would be taller, but both of his slots are open. Does anyone know if there are technological barriers to this hack?"
Use an external drive (Score:5, Insightful)
Otherwise, when they steal his laptop, they get 2 copies of the data and he'll have 0
Re:Not only that, you can back up a meaningful amo (Score:4, Informative)
The OS is more reliable then Windows, however the hardware can still fail. They use standard disks, standard memory, and a system board with electronics the same as other companies. My Powerbook is in the shop currently due to a weird disk corruption issue that looks to be due to bad memory.
On the plus side, all Mac laptops have 6 pin powered firewire ports, for a 100gb backup option using a 2.5 inch disk that the Mac will also happially boot from.
Re:Not only that, you can back up a meaningful amo (Score:2)
The OS is more reliable then Windows, however the hardware can still fail. They use standard disks
Yes and no. They mount the disc in shock-absorbent rubber (which Toshiba/Compal didn't for my x86 laptop, relying on the rigidity of the plastic case to protect it) and there is a "sudden motion sensor" either in the laptop or the drive, which, under the control of software, can unload the heads before the laptop hits the ground. More details here. [kernelthread.com] IBM do s [ibm.com]
Re:Not only that, you can back up a meaningful amo (Score:2)
Re:Not only that, you can back up a meaningful amo (Score:4, Insightful)
If you read the original post, you'd see the problems with this laptop were hardware-related, not OS-related: "and since it's a laptop, anything from trackpad to screen to USB port problems means sending the whole computer in for repair."
Linux is a great OS, but would you care to tell us how it's going to keep his trackpad and USB ports from failing? You must be using that experimental 2.9 kernel with self-healing hardware features - the year 2020 sounds great, but remember some of us are living in 2005.
Linux stops the trackpad *software* from failing (Score:2)
Many, many apparently-hardware faults are cured by diddling with the MS Windows drivers for the ailing device. The drivers, like the applications, can break and be broken fairly readily. That's much harder (equals much less frequent) on Linux.
If he's backing stuff up anyway, he can do it to a USB2+Firewire enclosure; if the lappie's hard drive puts the heads through the platter, he can still
No (Score:2)
Re:Linux stops the trackpad *software* from failin (Score:2)
Yah, but it is also random (Score:2)
Other possibilites (Score:3, Informative)
pcmcia supports IDE (Score:3, Interesting)
I know you mentioned INTERNAL drives but you'll likely pay through the nose for a drive like that.. try and find an adapter to the PCMCIA bridge and you'll have better success i think.
laptop drive on a usb2 external drive (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:laptop drive on a usb2 external drive (Score:1)
Re:laptop drive on a usb2 external drive (Score:2)
Hmm (Score:4, Insightful)
I'll be honest, though, I'm not sure you're approaching this the right way. Though that's not for me to decide (my apologies if I sound condescending) but I'd recommend using either firewire or network backup. It may not be as convenient in some ways, but there are some benefits:
1.) A network (even wireless) backup could happen automatically and sent to a machine with ridiculous amounts of storage.
2.) If you go with the PCMCIA solution, you risk losing the backup if you lose the machine. (i.e. stolen or dropped in water or something.) Basically, it'd be resilient against broader circumstances.
3.) You'd be able to approach this with already available technology, and you probably wouldn't need to buy anything extra.
Good luck.
Re:Hmm (Score:1)
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
You're right. Thanks to Windows and it's stupid Registry, it's not so easy to back up the apps. At that point, it depends on the Apps. You'll never get Office to do this (that I know of...) but I do have my own setup like this. I have a drive letter that stays the same no matter what machine I'm on. If I move to a new machine, I create that d
IBM Thinkpads (Score:2)
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Unfortunately not. The I8200 was the last of what Dell calls their "C series" laptops. They're now on the "D series". As far as I know, all machines within the D-series (Examples are I8500, I8600) are bay-compatible with each other, but not the old C-series. New drive carriers cost only around $10 though. Which reminds me I need to order one. Just got a new 80gig drive and I want to put the old drive into a bay.
Note that Dell
Dude ... It's the first link... (Score:1, Funny)
Why not search there instead of asking here?
Google Search [google.com]
Re:Dude ... follow TF link... (Score:2, Informative)
PCMCIA Firewire/USB2 card (Score:2)
Embedded 60gb drives are cheaper than standalone 5gb drives aren't they?
Dunno Bout Implementation of this ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless the machine was identical, putting this carbon copy onto another machine will be painful. The 2k/XP HAL make it hard since it zeros in on all hardware and doesn't recover from major changes very well. Not a problem to restore once you get the machine back, but if the problem was software you are back to square one.
No external messiness to deal with. And if his machine goes down, he just pops out the drive and pops it into a loaner machine.
Not true for anything but plain old documents. Any software installed (I'm assuming this is Windows) will probably not run off of an external drive without reinstallation due to DLL installations and registry changes that happen during the install. If you Ghost the machine off of the external HD then you are screwed unless the loaner is identical. Even then, the owner might object to this.
In addition, as you've described, finding a capacity drive bigger than 5g is damn near impossible. Your best bet is to just use an external solution. An external laptop hd via usb would do just fine.
Re:Dunno Bout Implementation of this ... (Score:2)
True, but he would at least have his data files (and in the same place as he's used to, mostly), and would feel comfortable wiping/shredding his disk (if possible) before sending the laptop in for repair. Get the new/fixed unit back, drop the image on in the other direction, and he not only has all his apps, settings, etc. back but he also has a current copy of his work.
Re:Dunno Bout Implementation of this ... (Score:2)
Instead, restore the original networked image and just copy the newer, changed files over from the loaner. You still have go through the
Re:Dunno Bout Implementation of this ... (Score:2)
Network backup? (Score:5, Insightful)
ipod (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:ipod (Score:1)
-j
Use USB2/Firewire if at all possible (Score:5, Informative)
As well, as others have mentioned, you can get a removable drive for the laptop itself. This is definately the fastest method (800Mbps). I have used these on compaq laptops, they hold a normal laptop HD, and you just swap it into the expansion slot when you need it.
Re:Use USB2/Firewire if at all possible (Score:1)
and that there is a difference between megabits/s and megabytes/s
Why not an ipod? (Score:2)
PCMCIA Mods (Score:3, Informative)
If the loan machine isn't identical (Score:1)
Why not concentrate on getting the stuff he REALLY couldn't do without onto a backup (I'm guessing, but probably email, documents and the data for one or two applications), along with practicing what to do with the backups when his PC goes back to get repaired? Unless he's into video in a big way, the chances are that "all the data that he can't live without" isn't that huge - maybe less than a DVD.
How about a dual path solution (Score:2)
Use an external USB drive backed up once a week or so, and combine that with the internal PCMCIA drive making delta backups...
That way you could have a complete snapshot no older than 1 week old, and still maintain a current backup too.
Also, try arranging the drive to facilitate this. Partition the drive so that all the programs are on the C: partition, and all data is stored on a D: partition. That way, you can ghost the C: partition for your applications, and
Re:How about a dual path solution (Score:1, Troll)
Whats that? I know of hda, hdb, hdc and partition numbers like hda1, hda2..
I dont have a device called "C:".
Re:How about a dual path solution (Score:2)
I WANTED HIM TO POST BACK!
what retards here
guess Ill go back and troll-play at k5. Screw y'all later.
Re:How about a dual path solution (Score:3, Funny)
Of course, under linux, you would NEVER have such a problem, because you are so clever and you would use a cron job combined with a Rube Goldberg Device to automate this whole process.
How bout a different laptop (Score:2)
How often does this thing die? Is it really that much of an issue?
Yes, laptops die, but if it's the same make/model repeatedly, maybe a different one is in order.
As always, back up your docs/personal files elsewhere.
Re:How bout a different laptop (Score:1)
His docs/data are backed up via the office network; it's reinstalling all the apps that we're trying to get around.
Re:How bout a different laptop (Score:2)
better (Score:2)
and never worry about backup again.
Re:better (Score:2)
Pansonic P2 (Score:2)
Madness (Score:5, Informative)
If you *have* to have a hotswappable HD ready to go. Buy him a USB or Firewire external case and put a laptop HD in it, get a copy of ghost and ghost the machine to the new HD every night. This solution *sucks*. And im not sure ghost supports USB/Firewire HDs?
If your dad is likely to come home most nights, convince him he needs to keep ALL his work files in a single directory (My Documents is ideal for this). Grab a copy of Unison [upenn.edu] and sync the data back to a home machine each night over the network. Its pretty efficent as unison will only send back files that have changed. If his HD dies at some point -- goto best buy and buy a new laptop drive which you were going to have to do ANYWAYS for your hot swap plan. This plan is great if: your dad comes home often, you have enough HD space to back up his documents (delete some porn if you dont). AND e is not constnatly creating huge files (GB size).
This is what I do to backup my laptop -- I have about 5Gb of documents, and never more then 10 megs gets changed at once. I even have a 4gb virtual machine I backup now (in addition to the 5gbs), and that takes like 10 mins.
Re:Madness (Score:2)
If neither of these are very good solutions, buy an external USB/Firewire drive and use unisyn to sync stuff TO the drive. Should be nice n speedy.
How about getting a better laptop? (Score:2)
No barriers but s-l-o-w (Score:2)
I was doing backups with dd, gzip and netcat, and it was awfully slow. My recollection is that it was the PCMCIA interface itself that was the limiting factor.
Why not external via PCMCIA card? (Score:2)