Hard to believe that only a few decades ago computer programmers literally punched cards to tell computers what to do. It was interface and data storage in a slim, portable, recyclable form -- cardboard.
Of course, computer hard drives today -- even consumer models -- make punch cards a punchline. Moderately sized computer hard drives hold hundreds of gigabytes, and there's even a terabyte (1,024 gigabyte) drive out there. Shrinking hard drive cost and size means stable, high-speed hard drives are working their way into portable electronics like video cameras. Now even laptop hard drives can seem cavernous.
1. How much is enough memory in your hard drive
2. Understanding hard drive technical specs
3. Why laptop hard drives are big enough to compete
4. Backing up to external hard drives
The best contacts and resources to help you get it done
First cut on hard drive selection is sheer size
A gigabyte used to seem like a lot of space, but no longer. If you expect to store a mountain of digital photos, MP3 music files or edit home video, you'll need gigs to spare.
I recommend: For an entry level PC now, 80GB is considered normal. A gaming and entertainment PC might come with as much as 500GB, a half terabyte. Some well-known makers of hard drives for laptop and desktop systems, as well as external hard drives, include
Hitachi America,
Western Digital,
Seagate,
IBM,
CMS Products,
Dell and
HP. For permanent storage of large amounts of data, consider external hard drives like a
CD or DVD burner or
CD and DVD drives.
A look at hard drives from a technical standpoint
Speed, cache, buffer, ATA, SATA, RAID ... there's a lot of terminology. If you buy a notebook or PC already built, it will likely come with the appropriate drive installed. But if you are replacing laptop hard drives or building a PC from scratch, better read up first.
I recommend: There are good, short guides to hard drive terms and technical explanations at
Vunet,
PC World and
CNET.
Laptop hard drives are all grown up -- because they have to be
Computer makers were famous for cutting corners on portable computers to drive down price. Now that people increasingly replace desktops at home with sleeker, easier-to-store laptops, hard drives inside them have had to keep up.
I recommend: If your notebook is due for an upgrade, probably best to just buy new and enjoy all the latest technology. Nevertheless,
CNET has a video guide to upgrading laptop hard drives. For alternatives to laptop hard drives, see Business.com for more on buying a
high capacity removable media drive or
USB drive.
Back up your files with external hard drives
For many people, a simple metal box as thick as a stack of cards is all they need to do potentially business-saving backups. Most external hard drives come with software that triggers a copy of your entire PC every so often.
I recommend: For home or small business, see computer hard drives from
Maxtor,
La Cie,
Seagate,
Apricorn,
SimpleTech,
Iomega and
Buffalo. See Business.com for more on
external hard drives. The ultimate corporate version of the external hard drive is NAS, or network-attached storage. Take a look at this breakdown on NAS and its uses at
CNET. Also, to complement your data strategy, take a look at
network back up and recovery software at Business.com.