Btw, you can get refurbished ones for relatively cheap too. ~$350[0]. I wouldn't put that in an enterprise backup server, but pretty good deal for home storage if you're implementing raid and backups.
Btw, you can get refurbished ones for relatively cheap too. ~$350[0]. I wouldn't put that in an enterprise backup server, but pretty good deal for home storage if you're implementing raid and backups.
Prices have soared recently because AI eats storage as well as GPU; but tracking the data hoarder sites can be worthwhile. Seagate sometimes has decent prices on new.
> Seagate sometimes has decent prices on new.
Make sure to check the "annual powered-on hours" entry in the spec sheet though, sometimes it can be significantly less than ~8766 hours.
Probably a good time to mention systemd automount. This will auto mount and unmount drives as needed. You save on your energy bill but the trade off is that first read takes longer as drives need to mount.
You need 2 files, the mount file and the automount file. Keep this or something similar as a skeleton file somewhere and copy over as needed