HARD DRIVE IS HARDENED TO DISASTERS
Anyone
who has been reading my column or listening to my radio talk show
"Computer America" knows I have been preaching the backup mantra for
years. If I ever decide to have a bumper sticker on my car, it will
read "It's not IF your hard drive will fail, it's WHEN it will fail"
which would make for a really long bumper sticker or one with
lettering so small as to encourage tailgating to read it. But
whatever the case, the technology behind magnetic hard drives
remains basically the same. Their capacities and speeds have
improved almost geometrically over the past few years with the
latest crop sporting multi-terabyte capacities. But their
reliability has pretty much remained the same.
I'm also an advocate of offsite backups. You can backup your hard
drive all day long but what happens if there's a fire or flood at
your location? Once again, the data residing on your hard drive is
in danger of being lost or destroyed just a surely as a hard drive
failure. Backing up to an offsite location insures the safety of
your information. Yet there are those of you who remain
uncomfortable sending your data out into the cloud despite the
assurances of privacy, safety and security by the companies that
provide these offsite backup services. So let me offer you yet
another alternative to backup safety.
Just introduced at January's Consumer Electronics Show, the ioSafe
Solo external hard drive with disaster protection was created to
offer a different kind of data protection not found in today's hard
drive offerings in that it protects from fire and flood. Basically
the ioSafe Solo is an external hard drive that connects to any
computer via the USB port. Currently the Solo is being offered in
500 gigabyte, 1 and 1.5 terabyte capacities with larger offerings
just around the corner. What makes the ioSafe stand out in the sea
of other external hard drives is that the company has made it pretty
much indestructible compared to any other run of the mill external
hard drive.
According to ioSafe, the Solo is able to withstand fires and is
rated up to 1,550 degrees Fahrenheit per the ASTM E119 industry
standard. ASTM is one of the largest voluntary standards development
organizations in the world and is a trusted source for technical
standards regarding materials, products, systems, and services. The
E119 is a test method that is intended to evaluate the duration for
which elements contain a fire, retain their structural integrity, or
exhibit both properties during a predetermined test exposure. In the
case of the Solo, we're looking at how long it can stand up to a
fire and protect the hard drive inside of its casing along with the
data stored on it. According to ioSafe, their extreme heat
protection is provided by a proprietary DataCast endothermic
insulation technology. Endothermic insulation uses trapped water
molecules to maintain internal heat temperatures at just above 200°F
while outside temperatures can reach a searing 1,550°F.
Also according to ioSafe, the Solo can be submerged in fresh or salt
water for 3 days at a depth down to 10 feet. Both of these
conditions of fire and water certainly meet or exceed anything that
a natural disaster such as a hurricane or building fire can throw at
it. According to one of my correspondents out at CES who observed a
demonstration of the Solo's protection, it was first hooked to a
computer and data copied to it. After its removal, it was then
subjected to fire and water torture. Gasoline was poured over the
Solo, ignited and left to burn for several minutes followed by a
thorough dousing of water blasted from a high-pressure fire hose to
extinguish the flames. The Solo was then cracked open and the hard
drive removed. Connection to the computer revealed all of the data
to be safe and retrievable. It was a very impressive demonstration.
The 1.5 terabyte model sells for $399.98. Comparable capacity drives
are in the same price range which means ioSafe isn't soaking you for
the added protection. In fact, I'd say the Solo is one hot deal.
Check one out before you buy your next external hard drive.
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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