You must have used computer for
a lot of years, and you perhaps still are puzzled about the hard
drives, external or internal. Then this article will tell you some best
tricks about external hard drive.
1. Run XBMC From a USB Drive
If you don't want to build a
full-fledged XBMC computer, you can always put XBMC Live on a USB drive
and connect it to an already built computer for certain occasions. And,
while you could do it with a USB thumb drive, a larger, external hard
drive would allow you to store your movies and TV shows on it, thus
saving you precious space on your main computer.
2. Move Your iTunes Library to an External Drive
If your music is the reason your
hard drive always seems full, consider moving those music files to an
external drive. Not only can you do so while keeping your preferences
and playlists intact, but you can then use previously mentioned iTunes
Export to take the most important music and export it back to your
space-challenged laptop.
3. Back up and Play Your Wii Games from an External Drive
You love your Wii, but your
discs are fragile, disorganized, and easily misplaced. By backing up
those games to an external hard drive, you can decrease your load times,
protect those disc from harm, and always have your games on hand
whenever you have a hankering for some Wii.
4. Use The External Drive's Controller to Connect Other Peripherals via USB
External drives work by having a
controller than converts SATA or IDE connections to USB. If you have an
old IDE optical drive that you only need every once in a while, you can
take the circuit board from an old, IDE-based external drive enclosure
and connect it to your computer via USB. It's remarkably useful for
netbooks that don't have optical drives, or those really rare occasions
you need to install something from CD on your newer, IDE-less computer.
5. Swap the External Drive with Your Computer's Drive
Sometimes, you'll actually buy
an external drive for one purpose or another, but realize you don't need
the space. In cases like this, you can actually open up the enclosure
and replace your laptop's hard drive with the better one, and use your
older, slightly outdated drive in the enclosure (you can even buy an
external drive just for this purpose—it's remarkably cheaper than an
upgrade from Apple).
6. Use an Extra Drive As a Scratch Disk
If you have a FireWire capable
drive and do any kind of video editing, using it as a scratch disk
instead of your internal drive can really speed things up. Caching files
to your internal drive can put quite a load on it, because it's
constantly reading and writing from the same drive. By shifting that
cache to another drive (connected with FireWire or something speedy),
you can increase the speed of your renders and exports, making you a
happier video editor.
7. Backup Your Backups Using Windows Home Server
Local backups are great, but
they're still vulnerable to lighting strikes, fires, floods, and other
immediate disasters. While you can automatically backup your computers
to a Windows Home Server, it's nice to have a backup of the server,
too—even if it's a backup of critical files and not a full backup—to
keep in certain, more protected places.
8. Clone Your Current Hard Drive
While backing up your data
allows you to restore it should anything bad happen, using those
external drives for direct clones of your current drive gives you a much
faster solution. It requires more manual work, but in the event of a
drive failure, you can be up and running again in no time (as opposed to
reinstalling your operating system all over again and then transferring
all your data, which can be done when you have the time to do so).
We've walked through how to clone your hard drive in both Mac OS X and
Windows.
9. Back Up Your Computer
If you haven't set it up
already, one of the most popular (and most important) uses for an
external drive is an automatic backup. Whether you're using Mozy,
SyncBack on Windows, or Time Machine on OS X, an automatic, local backup
is a must to make sure you don't lose any of your important data to the
ever-looming possibility of drive failure.
10. Turn an Old Hard Drive Into an External Drive
If you don't have a ton of
external drives lying around, you might still have a bunch of old
internal drives, and the best thing you can do is put them in a USB
enclosure so they see some use. Furthermore, this trick also works for
upgrading existing external drives: if it dies or becomes too small to
be useful, you can always swap the current drive out of the enclosure
for a better one you have collecting dust.
What other tricks do you know about external hard drive? You can also share your tricks on the comments o
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