Sunday, April 1, 2012

Best Tricks For Buying An External Storage Device

By Kel Shoeman


There are a lot of assorted selections these days when buying an external hard drive, and this can make it 100 times more difficult to make your choice when buying. Here are 4 tips to bear in mind when purchasing an external hard drive.

1. The external hard drive size

We aren't speaking about the size of the external hard drive when picking it up, we mean how many files it can store. Allow me to share four options for purchasing an external hard drive:

1. Solid State Drives (SSDs) that use the same technology as the tiny USB sticks except scaled up to make high capacity external disk drives. All of these use less power than traditional drives, but they're also a lot slower.

2. 50GB-250GB drives that most likely use a USB port to connect to the PCare considered small these days. In this day and age it is handy to have one of these external hard drives but will probablyfill it up very quickly.

3. 250GB to 1TB external drives generally use a power box or eSATA port. This is almost certainly the most popular external hard drive that is purchased and can hold quite a lot of data files, even thoughsometimes they can drain your laptop battery quicker when in use.

4. Drives larger than 1 TB will almost always need to be plug-in to electricity supply. These drives are frequently big in size and awkward to transport around, so certainly not a mobile storage space device. They are excellent for the home or workplace though.

2. Brand Does Matter

External drives are not regulated by the government-or by anyone-so there are huge variations in quality between different brands. Fortunately shopping online gives us access to others's testimonials of external hard drives. Take a look at Amazon.com or wherever you purchase external hard drives before you set your eyes on a specific drive-make sure other drives by that manufacturer all have high reliability scores or you could potentially get burned.

3. What Computer Connection is your External Hard Disk Drive

This can be a pretty important step to pay attention to as you do not need to pay money for an external hard drive and get it home, and find out the it cannot hook up to your PC.

What are the different connection types? 1. USB 2.0 (same as USB 1.1 OLD type) 2. USB 3.0 (favorably recommended) 3. eSATA (Have to to have an eSATA connection) 4. Firewire (not often used nowadays)

A drive which has USB 3.0 might be your best bet-they have the speed of eSATA but is compatible with every computer system made in the last 10 years. The majority of hard drives that support eSATA also have USB 2.0 plugs, which provide the same advantages. But be aware of shopping for an eSATA drive-you require a special eSATA plug installed on your computer system or notebook to make it work.

4. External Hard Drives Criteria-AC/DC

No, I don't know of any external hard drives that are supplied pre-loaded with songs by British band AC/DC-but you do need to determine how to power your external hard drives.

Smaller hard drives tend to be powered by the Direct Current (DC) that your USB port can put out. That means you don't need to be concerned about extra power cords. However it also ensures that these hard drives will drain down your notebook power supply quicker.

External drives that have alternating current (AC) will come with a power cord that needs to be connected to a power plug. Although these larger and older hard drives usually use less power from your computer, they also come with messy cords that have to be plugged in. Although this power is converted to DC by an inverter, the cords nonetheless exist and can make it less convenient.




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