I was told my PS3 had broken due to some motherboard failure. Warranty had of course expired, but they gave me a discount for getting a Slim rather than having the motherboard replaced.
Quote from: Achim on December 03, 2010, 11:58:00 AMI was told my PS3 had broken due to some motherboard failure. Warranty had of course expired, but they gave me a discount for getting a Slim rather than having the motherboard replaced.You seem to be having more than your share of "technology" issues!
Quote from: Hal on December 03, 2010, 06:24:05 PMQuote from: Achim on December 03, 2010, 11:58:00 AMI was told my PS3 had broken due to some motherboard failure. Warranty had of course expired, but they gave me a discount for getting a Slim rather than having the motherboard replaced.You seem to be having more than your share of "technology" issues! When I lost my PS3 earlier this year I also lost the data drive on my main PC and the hard drive on my wife's laptop. All in the same month. And none of the hard drives were backed up. A situation that has since been remedied.
Yes, RAID 0 is striping which splits the data across the array to improve speed and balance performance. Sorry to say, it's largely useless in desktops and you see very little if any benefit. I once built a dedicated PC with a gaming drive from a RAID 0 array and it was a waste of time.RAID 1 is mirrored and much better, however, again I have moved on from using RAID at all. There is no better backup than offline and I decided that disk failures were rare and when it does happen, I have all my installs and data backed up so it's an excuse to reinstall Windows anyway and clear out the crap.I now have a NAS drive and run a scheduled backup to back data up both ways. Much easier.One quick thing you could do to help with offline stuff is setup cloud backup with someone. Even Windows Live Messenger gives you 25gb free: http://www.windowslive.co.uk/skydriveI've been meaning to set it up myself. PC > NAS for bulk and basic hardware protection; NAS has two mirrored drives; NAS > Cloud for absolutely essential, house-could-burn-down protection. And requires no admin day-to-day...
snip... Take your Excel document, password protect and encrypt it, rename it "printerdriver_v3.dll" or something very ordinary, bury in another folder of random crap, zip the whole folder and password protect that, then upload it and don't, for goodness sake, forget what you did!
I just read some interesting news about Uncharted 3. The Nathan Drake character won't be returned this time. Instead you'll be playing as Grimace from McDonalds.