Seagate buys Maxtor for $1.9B 458
groovy.ambuj writes "Reuters reports that Seagate Technology would buy rival computer disk-drive maker Maxtor Corp. for $1.9 billion.
Seagate is already world's largest hard drive manufacturer and Maxtor is the third largest after Seagate and Western Digital."
Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, I know it's a nerd thing to say but it's almost as bad as losing a pet.
Now, because of the brands of said failed drives, I have developed a quality ranking apart from my friends. And it's the pain of that lost data that backs me up.
I had a death star (IBM deskstar [trilithium.com]) tear itself apart on me and even though it was one of those old Ukrainian IBM/Hitachi ones, I still shy away from Western Digital who now makes them also. I've also had a Seagate fail [wikipedia.org] me but (to be fair) I had bought it thoroughly used.
Now, when ever I go out and buy a drive, I'm leaning towards Maxtor simply because I have a lot of them and one hasn't failed me with crucial data on it. I'm a lot better prepared to deal with that now as I'm older and wiser so maybe I won't ever feel that level of pain again.
Many of my friends swear by Seagate and also claim they're the quietest thing out there.
These new drives made by the merged company should be quite good, perhaps they're able to combine technologies, patents, manufacturing methods and resources to form a very reliable and quiet drive.
What I'd like to ask slashdot readers is for a good way to measure drive quality other than throwing down chicken bones and looking at them or reading tea leaves?
I guess the only thing I've found so far is reviews on-line (sometimes Neweggs have the best sampling), any other suggestions? Is there some kind of hard-drive-consumer-report thingy out there?
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Insightful)
A good measure of the hard drive reliability is the warranty that the manufacturer is attaching to it. While there _will_ be failures before the warrarnty expires, it gives an indication as to how much you can trust the drive.
Seagate warranty (Score:2)
Re:Seagate warranty (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh and the WD drives I have bought recently have all had 5 year warranties.
Re:Seagate warranty (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Informative)
Then Seagate wins, their drives have a 5 year warranty, everybody else only offers 3 years max, some as little as 1 year.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:3, Interesting)
Came in handy when I had two drives from a 4 drive array that wrote at about 1/8th the speed of the other two. I couldn't produce a fault with any test, other than abysmal write speed. No problem, two new drives, advance replacement, done.
ALL HDs fail, so in my mind, a w
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Insightful)
At work, we only buy Seagate SCSI and ATA drives. We've returned RAID arrays to Dell because they failed to provide us with the proper drives (they just love to slip WDs in there). This is another bit of anecdotal evidence, but I've never seen a Seagate fail here. The few that have failed have been some Fujitsus and the few WDs that come in laptops. We're talking around 300 machines here.
I don't have much experience with Maxtors except the one in my firewall that is still going strong after 7 years.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:4, Informative)
SATA is just fine. It's almost as fast as SCSI and as far as the seagate barracuda drives go, the SATA disk is identical (well 7200 rpm anyway) to the SCSI disk, except it is cheaper. The rub is the RAID controller though. A good SATA raid controller is every bit as reliable as a SCSI RAID controller. A crappy SATA RAID controller (aka Dell CERC) will sour your experience with SATA. Our Apple Xserve RAID is all ATA (PATA even, although the new one is SATA) and it has proven to be extremely reliable.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Interesting)
That really isn't fair to Western Digital. A few years ago, when all [theinquirer.net] the IDE manufacturers were reducing their warranty period to one year for consumer drives, it was Western Digital that came out with their "Special Edition" drives, all of which came with three-year warranties. These drives ran like a champ. Since then they have dropped the "Special Edition" label, and almost all of their high-end drives come with a three-year warranty.
Back in those days, I bought 4 Maxtor drives, and all of them have failed (One of the main reasons for my move to Western Digital). As it's been said in other posts, anecdotal evidence really isn't much of an indicator for hard drives. I think most of the HD community simply put out crap back around 2002, but have since upped the quality.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Informative)
I am sold on Western Digital, 5 year contract, excellent drives, got a 10K raptor at home myself. Low failure rate in our enterprise environment. Cant vouch for seagate though, havent had too much exposure to them other than the dirt cheap 300GB I bought that was DOA.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:3, Informative)
Does anyone else here remember when 80MB drives were high end and 120MB drives were pretty much king of the hill? 40GB was the de-facto standard desktop computer size.
Well around that time (1991? 1992?) Seagate produced a huge run of bad 40GB drives and earned a bad rep for themselves that it took YEARS for them to shake off. If anyone on usenet or a BBS were to mention buying a Seagate driv
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Funny)
So now all the Seagate drives that failed quality control can finally be sold anyway - under the Maxtor brand.
Warranty not a good measure (Score:5, Insightful)
To know how reliable a drive is, you have to know actual failure rates. Only the manufacturer is typically in a position to accurately measure those and they pretty much never give it out without an NDA or court order. We on the outside are left manually piecing together the data using methods like The storage review drive reliablity survey:
http://www.storagereview.com/map/lm.cgi/survey_lo
which attempts to gather accurate statistics from large samplings from users. This seems like a lot of work but hopefully it will pry the window open and convince manufacturers that it won't be the end of the world if people know how reliable their drives actually are.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2, Informative)
I think I'd feel better if Maxtor was buying Seagate. Far too often I've seen bigger companies
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
I had a couple WD drives bite the dust on me, so I switched to seagate and haven't had a failure since. I've also had 6 of the IBM 75GXP Deskstars that are currently under class action lawsuits.. I had 5/6 of those fail with crucial data and couldn't afford a ba
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:4, Funny)
Just kidding. I've had quite a few brands of hard drives and that Seagate is the only one that's failed for me (and I even own a Quantum Bigfoot!), but I wouldn't have a problem buying another Seagate or other brand.
I've discovered the way to keep a hard drive working is to back up regularly. Drives only fail when you don't have backups.
(For any readers that don't know what an ST238 drive is...it was a 32 megabyte drive produced by Seagate back when 32 megs was the DOS upper limit. The R stood for RLL encoding, and they were also available in MFM encoding I think. Oh what a mess we weave when we amiss interleave! Or something like that.)
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
I had a death star (IBM deskstar) tear itself apart on me and even though it was one of those old Ukrainian IBM/Hitachi ones, I still shy away from Western Digital who now makes them also.
Western Digital makes DeskStars? Since when?
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
TBH its not really fair since harddrive companies have been so good at replacing failed drives. I don't remember which failed and which did not. How stupid are they to stop the 3 year warranties? Typically folks upgrade their drive before 3 years anyway. Perhaps they think their drives are too big to be upgraded within 3 years now?
I never bought a seagate, but
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
When trying to get a replacement i wondered if their returns system was well designed out of good customer service or frequency of use.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
The first WD drive I ever bought developed a cascading failure of bad sectors 6 months into using the drive.
I bought a 120GB Hitachi back when people considered 80GB more than anyone could ever need. It worked
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2, Interesting)
Fortunately, one of them is now simply storage , the other one however, died, it just stopped working entirely.
In my experience seagate drives aren't too shabby, I think a move like this one will further integrate the good hard disk technologies the companies own.
The NCQ (native command queing) and possibly the serial ATA standard (now on 2.0, at 3Ghz) could very well benifit
Dude, get over it (Score:5, Insightful)
There might be varying levels of quality among specific brands and models, but data loss is inevitable if your only line of defense is faith in your bullet proof manufacturer who has never failed on you before. Everyone has one, and every one's is different. Some people have an incredible string of luck with Seagate, others with WD, etc. They all die. If you don't have a robust backup plan that you test regularly, you're going to get fucked at some point. If you've worked with computers long enough, you learn this and understand it.
I look at a hard drive like most people look at a roll of toilet paper. I use it, it serves its purpose, it gets discarded. The data on it, however, is nearly sacred, and I take every precaution I can afford to protect mine. If I lose data, then I feel like I lost a pet. But I don't have any special attachment to my hard drives whatsoever.
Having faith in a hard drive vendor is like a quaint superstition from the time when people were so poor that they might only have a single hard drive containing all the data they've ever generated in their entire lifetime.
Re:Dude, get over it (Score:5, Funny)
You sir, value crap far too much!
re: all hard drives die (Score:4, Interesting)
For example, back in the early 90's, I ran a very popular BBS. I had multiple computers running 24/7 and constantly being accessed, loading and saving data to their drives. At that time, the Seagate SCSI drives like the Barracuda were the highest performance drives available, so I tried using them. I had one failure after another. Always bearing issues. The fact is, those drives ran *hot* and keeping them sufficiently cooled in anything resembling a standard PC tower case was nearly impossible, so they'd self-destruct. Did this make Seagate a "bad company"? No, but it told me their high-performance, expensive drives weren't appropriate for my needs.
Earlier on, I had many other failures with Seagate drives, but this was way back in the day when the standards were MFM and RLL. The very popular Seagate ST-238R (30MB!) drive was always losing data and going bad on people, for example.
None of this means anything as to reliability of today's IDE Seagate drives, though. And with my recent poor experiences with Maxtor SATA drives (failing immediately outside the 1 year warranty period), I'm currently a fan of Seagate for those.
Re: all hard drives die (Score:3, Interesting)
The only hard disks I ever could get their drives to talk to reliably were made by Kalok. And, well, being Kalok, that was until I had to replace the Kalok drive for bad sectors, or loud screech
Re: all hard drives die (Score:3, Insightful)
From those days, i still have a 100% working (zero bad sectors) 3 1/2" IDE (ata) 80mb Seagate (ST3096A). Its last days were spent on a 24hrs dial up BBS i turned off around 97. The drive still works fine. I also used to have a 5 1/4" MFM 40mb Seagate drive (ST251N?) which was used in the same machine; before it, the machine had a 5 1/4" RLL
Re:Dude, get over it (Score:2)
Re:Woah there! (Score:5, Insightful)
Woah there! Maybe you are taking this data thing too seriously.
Come to think of it... I used to be just like you. I always had redudant copies of hard drives, then copies of those, and then I went all the way and got a RAID controller and started out with Raid 5 but I figured that wasn't good enough to I mirrored that...
After about 10 years of doing this (since 1995... I still got backups of my old IBM PS1 on my current computer) I realized:
"What the fuck do I need all this data for?"
I've got shit I don't even remember. Hard drives just laying in my closet full to the brim of stuff I don't even know what is on. CDRs and CDRs of shit I backed up but yet I don't know what good it will do me because everything I now use is stuff I downloaded or bought in the last 6 months.
Maybe I'm too ADD, but I just can't keep up with crap that I did even a year ago that is worth keeping.
My suggestion to break this cycle. Pull out a random hard drive from a closet (or computer) that you can't remember what you put on it and format it and install something like Ubuntu or whatever OS you want to play around with.
It feels painful at first as you watch the progress of the install go by when you know you could be loosing valuable data, but you know what... If you can't remember what you put on their it probaly wasn't worth keeping.
Yes, data hording is an addiction and I had the same problem too so I understand how hard it can be to try to keep bit of data I have came across in my life time. I still need to ebay all these seagate drives...
Re:Woah there! (Score:3, Insightful)
The floppies and cassettes are so old as to have lost much of the data on them. (I confess I haven't stored them properly; but, even had I done so, there is still a good chance of data loss.) And the QIC tapes I have no device capable of reading now. I am quite certain there's some old letters, poems, songs, and
Combining patents.. (Score:2)
Let's hope the merged company can produce even better products, not by laying people off, but by overcoming intellectual property barriers that previously existed between the two companies.
Anecdotes mean nothing (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, I have had one of your beloved Maxtors totally crap out on me after only having it for 6 months?
What does this mean? Nothing. Hard drives are no different from elevisions or laptops any other piece of complicated equipment when it comes to reliability - on large scale average all the big brands have simmilar failure rates plus or minus a percentage point.
If you are worried about your data theres just a few you can do.
That's about it - loyalty to a given brand will get you nowhere, in the end they are all the same - for the most part good, but a bad batch once in a while.
Personally, I just buy the cheapest drives I can find and run them in my RAID array. If one fails, no big deal. And it saves a ton of cash.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Informative)
The learning path to backups (Score:2)
Seems that every single experienced computer user has gone through such an ordeal in life, be it with HDD's, floppy disks or even tape and only _after_ they lost important stuff will they backup.
Re:The learning path to backups (Score:2)
Seems that every single experienced computer user has gone through such an ordeal in life, be it with HDD's, floppy disks or even tape and only _after_ they lost important stuff will they backup.
My problem, is that all my stuff is backed up... on the install CDs and a few backup DVDs. Now the important files like my wife's check book spreadsheet? Nope, I haven't backed up any of her stuff. I'm going to be in a world of hurt if our drive ever dies. Yeah, I should know better, but come on we all do it!
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
I also steared clear of WD for a while, but nowadays they seem to have their act together again, and p
StorageReview.com (Score:2, Informative)
Now time for corrections:
#1 Hitachi (NOT Western Digital) took over the deskstar line.
#2 Hitachi is actually one of the best builders now
(if people would stop holding onto past problems before the line switched hands)
It is now one of the higher quality consumer HD manufactors
(*they are head to head performance wise with WD, some can run toe to toe with the WD Raptor (10k rpm SATA) while being only 7200rpm themselves. Hitachi also has a very go
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
Let the experts speak (Score:2)
But even the (relatively) large numbers of drives we see is anecdotal. Let's hear from the *real* experts:
http://faq.storagereview.com/tiki-index.php?page=B randMostReliable [storagereview.com]
-R
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:2)
1) Seagate
2) Maxtor
3) Western Digital
I've only had one Maxtor fail on me, and that was after 4 years of continuos usage in my desktop (which was rebooted, but never off for long).
I love the seagates I've been using since they are quite (I'm runnin SATA). Next time you need a drive, give them a shot.
As for WD? The one drive I bought from them failed the same day.
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:3, Informative)
Well there's a lot of anecdotal "evidence" against all the manufacturers - people who buy a very small number of drives will scream loudly when one fails, making that manufacturer seem bad despite it only being a single failure. My _p
Re:Hard Drive Voodoo? (Score:5, Funny)
I think the real question here is: did Seagate buy Maxtor for $1,900,000,000 . . . or for $2,040,109,465??
Re:There'll Be Anecdotes Flying Everywhere (Score:2)
Crap (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not that enthusisatic about loosing one of them.
Re:Crap (Score:2)
I'll just keep buying Samsung drives (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I'll just keep buying Samsung drives (Score:3, Informative)
This is unfair (Score:2)
I always liked Maxtor hard drives, they were rock stable, fast and silent.
I remember problems with some Seagate drives in Linux few years ago (related to DMA, some strange messages in kernel logs).
So I always tried to buy Fujitsu or Maxtor, and always tried to avoid Seagate.
Fujitsu stopped making hard drives and Maxtor has just been eaten.
What brand of hard drive should I choose in future? IBM?
Re:This is unfair (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This is unfair (Score:2, Informative)
IBM stopped making hard drives after the death star mess, I would reccomend Western Digital if you want to avoid seagate - although I have a seagate in my MythTV box and it works with no problems.
Re:This is unfair (Score:2)
Prices of hard drives don't drop like CPU or video cards, should we expect even higher prices now?
Re:This is unfair (Score:2)
But of course, your mileage may vary.
Re:This is unfair (Score:2)
Thanks, that explains a lot.
Re:This is unfair (Score:2)
All your bits are belong to us (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:All your bits are belong to us (Score:4, Insightful)
One can only hope that someone comes up with some paradigm shift in storage (either in price or capacity) that puts real pressure on the hard disk manufacturers to innovate and remain competitive.
paradigm shift in storage (Score:2)
Blu-Ray?
Uh oh! (Score:3, Funny)
Darth Seagate.... riiiise!
This isn't a bad thing (Score:3, Interesting)
I am curious, however, what Seagate intends to do with the WD brand. Whether you're a fan or not, they have built a reputation over the last 15 years or so. I don't think Seagate bought them just to kill off the competition.
Re:This isn't a bad thing (Score:4, Informative)
Question (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Question (Score:2)
Justin.
2005, yet another sting in the tail. (Score:2, Insightful)
Google & AOL (well 5% of)
Seagate & Maxtor
2005 has been a year of spending money for big players, it seems. Can anyone predict any more big moves before Dec. 1st?
Maxtor == CRAP iff Seagate 'abandons' them... (Score:3, Insightful)
As for Western Digital, other than their HDs running hot, I've had no data loss from them and would recommend them to anyone who can't get/afford Seagate.
Nice logic... (Score:4, Insightful)
Now that Seagate 'owns' Maxtor, will they make Maxtor drives better or just kill the product line off and just use Maxtor's facilities to churn out Seagate HDs?
And pray tell, why the hell do you think that a Seagate drive produced at the same facility with the same equipment would be different than a Maxtor drive? Loyal to the sticker perhaps?
I bet you're one of those people who have a "Piss on Ford" bumper sticker too eh?
Re:Maxtor == CRAP iff Seagate 'abandons' them... (Score:2)
Psst. Nothing on any of your hard drives is permanent.
This sarcastic (yet true) comment, of course, pretty much ensures that I will have a hard drive failure in the near future. :)
What happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Score:4, Insightful)
Then again, they approved of other such travesties as Exxon + Mobil, Viacom + CBS, Disney + Capital Cities, News Corp + Direct TV, and countless other clearly anti-competitive mergers throughout the last decade or two.
Allowing this merger will do nothing but slow down innovation and increase prices.
Has the Sherman Anti-Trust Act been repealed, or am I missing something here?
Re:What happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Score:2)
I always though that Maxtor and Matrox should merge, considering they are just anagrams of each other.
Re:What happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't neglect the realities of being a corporation in a world that tries to overcontrol many companies in order to subsidize the few. Hard drive companies have
Re:What happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't believe that monopolies are more than temporary unless they are given the power of monopoly through government licensing and regulations.
Huh? Isn't the reason we have these regulations because we've learned from history that the exact opposite of what you're saying is true? Did the government somehow kill competition for standard oil to give them a monopoly? Seriously, I'm asking. Perhaps you
Re:What happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Score:3, Interesting)
Standard Oil was a "monopoly" by lowering prices so low using techniques that the competition couldn't match. They lowered oil prices from 60 cents to 8 cents per gallon, a boon for consumers and for production and manufacturing. The only ones complaining were their powerful competitors, and this is why government got involved. Before the end of the government investigation, Standard was
Re:mnb Re:What happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust (Score:2)
Yeah, patents have nothing to do with government over-regulating.
One point you missed is a very important one: these companies might be on the verge of death, and when a market disappears, you see many companies trying to stay alive by merging.
Will hard drives be on the desktop in 1 year? Probably. 2 years? Still looks good. 5 years? I'm not so su
casualty (Score:4, Interesting)
While I'm generally a fan of Seagate, all drives suck these days. I buy Seagate because they're the only drive with a 5 yr warranty. I now buy hard drives in pairs so I have a spare when one is being RMA'd.
2 160GB drives + RAID 0/1 controller is a pretty cheap backup solution with a guaranteed lifespan of at least 5 years.
Re:casualty (Score:2)
It is a redundancy solution, if anything. I have the same setup on my g/f's computer. 2 Barracudas is all that I need.
Do you want a harddrive? (Score:2)
What kind?
Dude, do you want a harddrive or what?
There seems to be a trend in computers where there are 2 to 3 big alternatives. OSes -- Apple vs Mac vs *NIX/Linux. CPUs -- AMD vs Intel vs IBM. Disks -- Seagate vs Western Digital. Laptops -- Mac vs PC. Desktops -- Apple vs Dell.
I can't say that this is a good thing or not, but it seems to be a trend.
For those keeping score... (Score:5, Interesting)
2002 - Hitachi buys IBM HD division
2006?- Seagate buys Quantum
So we're down to Seagate, Hitachi, Western Digital and Samsung. Any other HD brands you see are OEM'd by them.
Re:For those keeping score... (Score:3, Interesting)
Intellectual Property (Score:5, Insightful)
I actually think that one of the larger reasons has to do with intellectual property. After being around for a bunch of years, Maxtor has a store of worthwhile patents on hard drive technology that Seagate could have a good use for. Being a competitor, it might have been difficult (read: $$$) or impossible for Seagate to license a Maxtor technology with Maxtor as an independent entity. There is also the intellectual property stored up in Maxtors employees: good talent can be hard to find, and if Seagate is expanding and developing more new technologies, it may have been a lot easier to just buy Maxtor (and gain its employees) rather than try expand its workforce at the slow pace of engineering and management recruiting/hiring.
decently profitable company? (Score:3, Interesting)
When Maxtor bought Quantum HDD, Maxtor was somewhat profitable. Both Maxtor and Quantum brought good balance sheets to the deal with a few hundred million in cash each. Quantum sold because they could not see a path to profitability. Maxtor bought because the executives had a hard on to do an aquisition.
The end result of this first merger was a disaster. The combined company has been limping along and losing market share. The biggest plus on the balance sheet is "goodwill". This "goodwill" is the am
is it me? (Score:5, Interesting)
Target vs Wal-Mart
Home Depot vs Lowe's
Coke vs Pepsi
Republicans vs Democrats
CVS vs Walgreen's
Nike vs Reebok
Verizon vs Cingular
Firestone vs Goodyear
Marlboro vs Camel
...
There are a lot more that I can't think of right now. I guess since monopolies often get broken up, things tend to stabilize at duopolies...
Flash Drives? (Score:2)
Limited lifetime (Score:2)
who's left? (Score:3, Interesting)
Over the last few years, I've used Western Digital and IBM/Hitachi pretty much exclusively, primarily IBM/Hitachi. I've never had a problem ever with either brand. About a dozen or so drives over the past several years and they were only ever replaced for bigger/faster drives, never because of a defect or problem. I guess I'll really stay away from Seagate now. But I'm not sure why everyone seems to have horror stories about IBM/Hitachi. I've found them to be fast, quiet, and reliable. In fact, although I will pick up a WD if it's on sale, Hitachi is usually a few dollars cheaper and not as loud as a typical WD drive, in my experience.
Pretty good bargain (Score:2)
Actually (Score:5, Funny)
Seagate buys Maxtor for $1.9B: RIPOFF (Score:2)
Oh, I should read the article? One moment.
Buying the company blablabla. Hum, check it out on eBay [ebay.com]: Rare Maxtor drive for sale. Soon not available anymore, will be collectors item with vastly increased value.
P.S. This is a random first hit on eBay. I am in no way associated to this seller. If you maxtor collectors item does not increase in value, do not complain to me. I warned you!
How I backup my mp3s and my documents (Score:3, Interesting)
- Burn them on DVDs (60GB = 15 DVDs).
- Give one set to my brother for Christmas.
- Give another set to my friend for Christmas.
- Keep a private server going and encourage my friends to get the latest stuff.
I've had a hard drive crap out on me and I've lost a ton of mp3s before but I had copies at some place or another. Sharing your data with your family and friends is one sure way to have a distributed backup system. Now, you don't control their data but chances are if they have big harddrives they'll keep that stuff around.
This is how I backup my documents:
- compress it every month or so and make a copy on each hard drive on my computer. Occasionally I backup to CD. Actually I think this data has less backups than my mp3s, even though it's some of it's important, but I could always embed a password protected file into one of my mp3 disks that no one would notice.
Re:How I backup my mp3s and my documents (Score:2)
Tom
Read the fine print (Score:4, Funny)
Actually it's $2.6 billion, with a $700 million rebate.
And that puppy expires December 31, so they'd better remember to send it in.
Backup mirrors - try Robocopy ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's simply destroying a competitor to allow them to monopolize more of the market.
All this crap happened in the 20's. The US became extremely pro-business and anti-regulation, from the supreme court and president down.
This caused the depression. The depression removed the focus on the rich and corporate entities and returned much of the money they looted from the middle and lower classes, we had quite a few prosperous, happy decades.
Now we get to relearn our lesson I guess. Ready for the next depression? Probably only a decade or so out now?
Remember, we don't charter corporations so the shareholders can become rich and powerfully, that is a side-effect; we allow it because it's supposed to help everyone. When it stops helping the general economy and starts simply being self-serving, we need to re-evaluate the system and tweak it a little.
Re:lol... (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, but that's after the rebate, if it ever arrives.
Re:Good but bad... (Score:2)
He said that he prefers Maxtor over Western Digital, which must be a joke (though I don't really get it).
I've had maybe a dozen or so hard drives. One Maxtor-- the drive head broke somehow, destroying the disk. The rest have been Western Digitals-- even my 200MB ones still work fine.
Oh, and I had a couple 42-meg Seagates, both of which crashed bad after maybe 2 years.
To summarize:
Western Digital => The Google of Hard Drives
Maxtor => Teh Suck
Seagate => Assimilating Teh Suck
Re:Good or bad? (Score:2)
Re:Good or bad? (Score:2)
Seagate drives have always sucked. I've hurled more dead seagate drives down the concrete path than any other brand of hard drive.
Re:And the Corporations shall inherit the earth... (Score:3, Insightful)
This merger isn't about making more profits -- it is about cutting the bleeding that has occured now that hard drive space is a commodity. How many hard drive companies did we have 10 years ago versus today? Do you recall all the companies that are gone now?
How can you look at the prices of hard drives versus the number of companies and see a problem? You're pushing me to think you want regulation