![]() Well, the Seagate Central NAS died silently in the middle of the night, I found it already dead the next afternoon when I was looking for an old pdf file which contained some obscure technical information about solenoid valves. Sudden, tragic demises just put you out of circulation with no chance to settle pending issues and leaving your loved ones in angst (or not…). You can redact your will, put your papers in order, say goodbye to your loved ones, and just expect whatever you think happens afterward. Orderly deaths give you the benefit of being prepared for the event. Like ourselves, the way it dies can be either in an orderly fashion or in a sudden, tragic event. Having worked as a systems administrator in a small company in the 90s, I am aware of the life fact that eventually, every hard disk will fail. Then I started to dump on it photos, music, movies, documents, and whatever kind of data that was not of recurrent use. It was a sleek alternative to a USB external disk, having a 1 Gb Ethernet interface port, which I connected to one of the GB Ethernet switches of my SOHO network. ![]() A few years ago, (well, exactly 5 years 4 months and 3 days, according to the Sea Tools software, supplied by Seagate) I got a 2 TB Seagate Central external hard disk.
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