
Originally posted by germcevoy:New computer. Have a question. I have 2TB of storage divided up into :
C: 500GB
D : 1TB
E : 500GB
What I want to know is can I isolate one of these from Windows to use purely as a back up. IE, if I have a crash I can still retrieve everything from one of the other drives? Ideally i'll just load everything onto C and then copy it in D or E so in the event of a crash I lose C i'll still have everything on one of the other drives.
So in simple terms, what drive should I use for backup?
Originally posted by LikeASong:The usual thing is using the biggest partition (in your case, the 1TB one) for back-up -ing the info, and the other(s) for daily use. I can't see the point in three partitions though, maybe someone can give your further details. But I'd use the 1TB as possible back-up drive.
Originally posted by iTim:[..]
If you're running Windows (as far as I know) any partition will be suitable since in the event of C: being wiped, the partitions don't get touched. I use my D: partition for backup and have re-installed Windows a few times (not due to a system crash though) and each time all my data on D: has been left intact.
Ideally, go for the largest since it'd back the most up.
Originally posted by MWSAH:Ditched the Sennheisers, ordered the Denon AH-C751. Big price tag compared with the Sennheisers but some German site with good comments sells it for 57 euros instead of the 150 euros here in Holland.
Some very good reviews, downside is the large size and weight. Superb sound quality though.
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Originally posted by LikeASong:The usual thing is using the biggest partition (in your case, the 1TB one) for back-up -ing the info, and the other(s) for daily use. I can't see the point in three partitions though, maybe someone can give your further details. But I'd use the 1TB as possible back-up drive.
Originally posted by germcevoy:the 3 partitions was the default setup.
Got the earphones this morning. Played U2, Snow Patrol some dancy stuff and now Coldplay with them and they're just great. Compared with the Sennheiser CX300 it offers much better handling of bass and treble with crystal clear acoustics.
Worth my money, hope they last longer than Sennheisers 2.5 year.
Originally posted by drewhiggins:[..]
[..]
So those are good for mid-range dance music and heavy metal and older rock? Do they clip or distort at high levels with poorer encoding on files e.g. 192Kbps ripped from an old 1990 remaster - and how well can you hear them in a busy environment e.g. bus or train etc?
Also, do they hold in well, like not moving around?
Originally posted by MWSAH:[..]
They don't clip as far as I know. I haven't listened to such ancient recordings yet lol. Will do soon. I'm sure you can hear a bad master though like RHCP's Californication. The sound isolation is very good, somewhat better than the Sennheisers. But it depends what your earcanal size is.
They hold in well too although they're a bit larger than other in-ears on the market. But they won't drop while sprinting although I haven't tested that yet.
Originally posted by drewhiggins:[..]
The last time I tried the in-ears they just didn't work for me - they kept falling out. But these, I think might work a lot better.