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amateurrobotguy 06-03-2005 17:11

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
Wow Dude. I have to say, you sure do love you storage ;) Now the question is, how much of that staorage do you actually use :p

Thanks DarkJedi for being on the same page with storage as me :)

Andrew Y. 06-03-2005 21:55

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
USB drives all the way

i own a 1 gig stick Awsome for projects!

Rombus 07-03-2005 00:59

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
lol, i figure im using 50ish% all together. I do some DV editing on the side for my team and my job, so that can eat up alot of the 200 gigs on my desktop. A majorty of my data is backups of programs so i dont have to use the CDroms, Backups of my games, A few gigs of digital pictures, Some Anime, and some of my fav tv series. My housemate is more insane, he has a 300 gig hard drive filled with anime, along with a zipper case with about 150-200 DVDs with various anime he has.

Now dont get me wrong, i have a spindle of 100 cd-rs on my desk, and i do burn stuff, but every computer i access usually has a USB port, so thats much more convientent for transfering papers and whatnot.

DarkJedi613 07-03-2005 08:54

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
Now a related question - what do you guys use to burn stuff on the CDs?

I use Roxio Drag-to-Disc, fits in great with windows so I just drag and drop. Only thing is other computers flip out sometimes while trying to read it. (It has some auto installer on it that allows them to be read, its just annoying).

Andy A. 08-03-2005 22:27

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
One thing everyone forgot-

Digital cameras!

Actually, for a long while I resisted getting a 'jump' drive. I figured I had a 256mb SD card and a ittybitty usb reader for it. Why buy something that was just the card and reader in one piece? Since I carry my laptop, camera and assorted gadgets with me everywhere, I always had the card and reader ready for use. It worked well, I found I liked browsing the images directly rather then using the bundled camera browser.

Eventually I saw a cheap 256 PNY drive at bestbuy, and picked it up with some birthday money. It's small, fast and insanely useful. I can't imagine how I got along with out it.

Now, when every computer has bluetooth we can just all have wireless flashcards embedded in our shoes and always be ready to go. Now theres portable data!

-Andy A.

Mike 09-03-2005 15:35

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
Holographic Versatile Disc
Between 10 TB and 1.5 EB of space
EB = Exabyte... $@#$@#$@#$@# straight, an exabyte.

http://p2pnet.net/story/3855
http://p2pnet.net/story/3769

amateurrobotguy 09-03-2005 20:20

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by DarkJedi613
Now a related question - what do you guys use to burn stuff on the CDs?

I use Roxio Drag-to-Disc, fits in great with windows so I just drag and drop. Only thing is other computers flip out sometimes while trying to read it. (It has some auto installer on it that allows them to be read, its just annoying).

I use Roxio as well. I am not sure if it has the drag and drop feature though. I just pop-up the app and burn it from there. I think it is version 5. I'm not really willing to spend the money to get 7(or is it 9?).

When would you ever need terabytes or exabytes of information to be stored. If you need that much, you need some serious counseling. This is probably what the nerd would look like(See Pic)

Rombus 09-03-2005 22:59

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by amateurrobotguy
When would you ever need terabytes or exabytes of information to be stored. If you need that much, you need some serious counseling. This is probably what the nerd would look like(See Pic)

Not necessarily . I remember when I thought installing a game that was 400 megs (Descent III) was completely huge. Now I toss around 400 Meg files like water. A common rule of thumb: If you have the space you will fill it. For example, 1 hour of Digital Video equals about 13 GB.

For some interesting numbers on size of digital audio and digital video: Click Here

What about capturing your fav TV Shows in High Def? or backing up your DVD collection to your hd? You could easily use up a lot of space!

Jeff Rodriguez 09-03-2005 23:27

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
1 Attachment(s)
I use a 128MB '66 Oldsmoblie Toronado. ;)

gobeavs 10-03-2005 01:25

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
I don't like USB drives.

My most recent affair - I just put my 512MB USB 2.0 drive through the wash, doesn't work at all now.

Then I had a flash drive and Wi-Fi capable combo, which I accidentally went into the ocean with....after thorough washing, it still didnt work properly so I gave it to a fellow team member to fix and I haven't seen it since :D.

So I like gmail....

tkwetzel 10-03-2005 02:00

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
I use all sorts of media for various purposes. I use floppies, cd-r's, mini cd-r's, cd-rw's, dvd-r's (in multiple formats), flash drive, and my hard drive. My printer also has a 7 in 1 card reader, so I can read most forms of compact media. As for what program I use, it again depends on what I am doing. I use Roxio Easy CD Creator, Nero, HP DVD, and arcsoft ShowBiz 2, among others. Some of them allow for easier editing or burning of certain formats of data than others.

Wetzel 10-03-2005 09:54

Call me crazy...
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by amateurrobotguy
I use Roxio as well. I am not sure if it has the drag and drop feature though. I just pop-up the app and burn it from there. I think it is version 5. I'm not really willing to spend the money to get 7(or is it 9?).

When would you ever need terabytes or exabytes of information to be stored. If you need that much, you need some serious counseling. This is probably what the nerd would look like(See Pic)

My first computer of my own had a 40mb harddrive. I couldn't fill it up. The first computer in my house didn't even have a harddrive. Who would ever need a gigabyte of data?

At any rate, with bioinformatics we routinely deal with terabytes of data from diffrent projects. This data glut is going to be the next big challenge in biology. My dad deals with petabytes of information at work, and making that data seamlessly remotely available to a dozen different organizations.


Wetzel

Mike 10-03-2005 10:19

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by amateurrobotguy
When would you ever need terabytes or exabytes of information to be stored.

The guy thats developing this hardware is the same guy who, years ago, was being criticized by IBM because he was selling 5MB floppy packs and IBM's main argument against him was "Nobody will ever need that much storage."

Rombus 10-03-2005 10:29

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
hehe, ive washed my 64 meg thumbdrive 2 or 3 times now, still works fine. The case came apart though, so now i got 2 case halfs held together by the cap, when i want to use it i just pull out the circuit board itself.

Here is a usb drive one of my friends made:

amateurrobotguy 10-03-2005 18:59

Re: What Storage Media Do You Prefer
 
Just to be accurate, here is a chart with all the storage levels:

In terms of gigabytes, which I am sorta using as a 'standard' here is the equilvalents.

1 Terabyte=1024 gigabytes.
1 Petabyte=1048576 gigabytes.
1 Exabyte=1,073,741,824 gigabytes.
(Gets interesting names from here)
1 Zettabyte=1,099,511,627,776 (1 TRILLION+) Gigabytes
1 Yottabyte=1,125,899,906,842,624 (1 quadrillion+)gigabytes. (or over 1 quintillion megabytes)

Now you are REALLY REALLY REALLY a hardcore nerd if you even come close to needing a Yottabyte. You could probably store every movie, music, picture, etc. on the internet with just one or two Yottabytes and maybe have room to spare(I hope everyone can agree on that:D).

Just running it through a calc, you can have over 1 TRILLION hours of movies to just use 1 yottabyte. You would have to live for 100 million +years just to watch it all. Or you could have over 2 trillion hours of music. For that you would have to live for 200 million years.

Even if you did somehow in a freaky way filled up an entire yottabyte, how would you even keep track of how many files that would be.

BTW: I had to google what the name of the digits past a trillion are :) I also appears like they were running short of cool names past a exabyte :D
Here is the american digit system:
thousand
million
billion
trillion
quadrillion
quintillion
sextillion
septillion
octillion
nonillion
decillion


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