[realmusicians] Re: Hard Drive Choices

  • From: Indigo <33indigo@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: realmusicians@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 26 Nov 2011 10:49:15 -0500

Some version of Linusx called Winkie 3, I believe, came on my ZT computer's Windows 7 re installation disk.

Do you know anything about any of the tiny Linux variants.
I also have one called Fox something, which came from FoxCon, which is supposed to have web browser, word processer, etcetera. There's actually a little bit of translated from Chinese persuasion from FoxCon to try this Fox Linux, and you'll never go back to Windows again
Boot and Go on line in seconds, they say.
Do any of these use standard Windows keyboard shortcuts?
How would I learn which is the most accessible without plowing through a bunch of them. What size thumb drive would hold NVDA , Vinux, and one of these tiny Linux variants, which I remember being only a meg or so, maybe less.
Thanks,
Indigo L


On 11/26/2011 6:08 AM, D!J!X! wrote:
Get a few linux tools and pop them into vinux. All runs on ram from a CD
with speech, when you're done, nothing to be seen on the hard drive and/or
OS!

HTH, D!J!X!

-----Original Message-----
From: realmusicians-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:realmusicians-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Indigo
Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2011 1:47 AM
To: realmusicians@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [realmusicians] Re: Hard Drive Choices

What I'd like is NVDA Portable and some kind of audio device on a thumb
drive.
What an emergency tool that would be.
You could plug it into any computer and work  right away, like in those
library computers.
   nothing much is installed on the host computer, though I find that NVDA
portable does leave a few files behind after you pull the thumb drive out.

On 11/26/2011 12:16 AM, Chris Belle wrote:
hard-drives are all experiencing artificially jacked up prices now
because of the flooding in China, and even though western digital was
the only one hit really hard, everybody's trying to get a little extra
pie right now.

Those samsung drives are cool too, and quiet, the baracudas's aren't
very quiet from what I understand, and even though I have a separate
tracking room, keeping the noise down in the control room is always a
good thing where critical listening happens.

Caddy's have always been a good idea even when you had to screw a
piece on to the drive, and when i couldn't get another one when they
were sold out, I got an esata external caddy instead as another option.

That's good too, and it also acts as a usb caddy.

when hooked up as esata, it acts just like an internal drive, the
computer doesn't know any different.

the only difference in esata is the kind of connector, it terminates
in a sata connection inside the machine anyway.

so, how ever you do it, your golden.

If the bios really does go away soon, usb 3 may end up being as good
as a sata connection as they claim bi directional transfers and if we
don't have to deal with hand off routines between windows and the
bios, then usb will be an easy boot option instead of having to rig
things to get it to happen in windows.

Casper can make a usb bootable drive, but it's not something I'd trust
except to resore backups.

I actually had xp running off a thumb drive once just for funnies.

It ran slow, but it ran.

I don't know what voodoo casper is doing to make that happen, but this
is where having to mix and match and make older and newer technology
work together didn't work so well.

In some cases, it's beter to let the bios handle things, in others,
let windows deal with it.

for instance, leaving ahci mode turned off in the bios makes it a hell
of a lot easier to install xp without having to deal with textmode
drivers, allowing your sata connectors to immulate ide which windows knows
about.

I think with windows 7, daw vendors are starting to allow windows to
handle that stuff since the performance is slightly better, but many
daw vendors still like to turn off ahci mode.

Also, translation issues since these drives are getting so big, it's
simply not possible to store the big numbers in the bios with small
memory, you should go read about this stuff sometimes, it'll make your
head spin and wonder how any of this stuff ever worked in the first place?

It truly in a crazy situation where we have 1980s technology trying to
play with 2011 technology and just sort of half assed working.

At 10:54 PM 11/25/2011, you wrote:
Since Chris told me how fast his SamSung SpinPoint F3's are, I looked
into them, and they're revolutionary for sure.
The F3's were the first to put 500 gigs on a single platter, so the 1
TB drive only has 2 platters, while others have 4 or 5.
2 platters means less spinning mass, fewer mechanisms inside, smaller
motor, way quieter, quicker seek time, and possibly longer life.
They are shown for $59 to $79 at various places, but when you go
there, they're on back order, with no certainty as to when more will
come in.
NewEgg says they'll ship today, for $169.99.
Gee Thanks, I think I'll hang on a bit and learn what happens,as SATA
3 drives impact the market.
There's already a new SATA 3Barracuda for $120, with 6 gigs per
second transfer, not 3 like SATA 2 drives, and 64 meg cache.
Today I found a SATA 3 compatible header that goes in a PCIA slot.
I don't know its price yet, but what if you could get the sata 3
drive plus the sata 3 adapter for the price of a sata 2 drive.
All the stuff advances every day, and sellers will often price older
technology at higher prices than the latest stuff.
I found 5400 rpm F1 and F2's at $160 to $170, as much as the 7200 rpm
F3's, and F3's with 16 meg cache priced as high as F3's with 32 meg
cache.

One thing I'm convinced of now, even a single caddy, or docking
station is a great and very affordable idea, then you can pick up
extra drives as you find them at good prices, do backup images like
Ross McGregor is doing, and, most of all, isolate Reason 6 and that
nasty Code Metor on a drive by its lonesome, so it can't screw up
everything else.
Even though I don't really mind Unplugging the mouse and keyboard,
Reason ignition key, monitor plug, power plug, removing both case
side panels, that's 4 screws to take out and put back in, removing 4
more screws that hold the drive, that's 8 more moves, unplugging
stubborn cables from the drive's back and plugging them back into the
new drive, replacing both case sides, replacing all the cables, how
can all that compare to a couple of seconds for plugging the bare
drive into the caddy?

Indigo L

For all your audio production needs and technology training, visit us
at

www.affordablestudioservices.com
or contact
Chris Belle
cb1963@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
or
Stephie Belle
stephieb1961@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
for customized web design






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