Title says it all. Most of the stuff I had no backup for. It sucks but I’m trying to take it in stride. Time will tell if I actually needed any of that data or if I was just hoarding it with no actual use.

I’m still trying to recover the data with pros, and in any case I’ll find a cost-efficient way to keep backups from now (any suggestions? One drive? External SSD?)

Have any of you experienced this? How do you feel or how would you feel? Is this your worst nightmare? Let’s discuss

  • Fluboxer@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Depends on what you have to backup

    I backup some stuff I don’t really care about yet don’t want to be bothered recovering in cloud, in encrypted archives

  • Celcius_87@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Once as a teenager I think I had a drive die and I lost my data, but ever since then I’ve always made sure to have a backup of my data. Ironically, I haven’t had a drive die since then lol. For example, I’ve got ssds from over a decade ago still running daily with no issues.

      • Mossheart@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        All storage media fails HDD or SSD. Focus on a backup plan, not your media type.

      • Firestarter321@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        All drives die eventually whether they are HDD’s or SSD’s.

        8 years is a good run for any type of drive.

        Backups are key for keeping your data safe over the decades.

        • yogopig@alien.topB
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          1 year ago

          But aren’t SSD’s good for like decades of continual use and petabytes of written data? That seems much more reliable than hdds.

          • Firestarter321@alien.topB
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            1 year ago

            Not necessarily. I’ve had enterprise SSD’s die that were under 1yr old with less than 100TB written.

            I also have HDD’s used in my surveillance system that have several petabytes written to them over the last 6yrs still going strong.

            I just moved the HDD I got in my first NAS (8TB WD Red) to its 4th home and it just turned 7 y/o.

  • snatch1e@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    That is why you want to have backups. You have learnt it the hard way, you obviously not the one who had this issue. I believe almost everyone in a such way got his lesson.

    The most cost-efficient backups are still depending on the amount of storage. As for me, it can be external drive/backup NAS and cloud.

  • Odd_Medicine_4185@alien.top
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    1 year ago

    Have you tried contacting HARRY_SPEEF On Instagram? he’s the expert that helped me when i had same issue some weeks back

  • ByWillAlone@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Depends on what caused the hdd to fail. If it was the PCB, for example - that would have been 100% recoverable 20 years ago, but for the past couple decades the interleave/alignment data is stored on the pcb and without the original, a drive just looks blank to a new PCB. If the drive supported on-device encryption, and the pcb failed, you can eventually put the drive back in service but your data is gone.

    Motors, bearings, and head actuators can usually be repaired enough to salvage data in a competent lab. Also certain failures caused by firmware flaws can be recovered from (I have done this myself).

  • lkeels@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    If you didn’t have a backup, you already know, it wasn’t important.

    • M3M3-@alien.top
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      1 year ago

      I guess not. Is anything that important? Is it not better to let go of as much as possible?

      • lkeels@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        The stuff on my drives is absolutely that important, and I have backups of all of it.

  • hobbyhacker@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Why people only post here after their drive dies? Don’t be offended if you won’t get sympathy here, because there are about 2 posts like this every week.

    Why there are no posts like “Look, guys I’ve made backups, be proud of me!” ?

  • WhatAGoodDoggy@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I’ve had one drive die on me and that was in a PC that was inside my house when it experienced a severe fire.

    It lasted long enough for me to pull the data to another disk but on the next reboot it died.

    These days I have a parity protected nas, a backup nas and and an off-site storage solution with my more essential data. Also cloud for photos.

  • WikiBox@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I have two internal SSDs in both my PC and in my Laptop.

    One SSD is used for OS and files as normal. The other is used for automatic versioned backups of user files (not the OS) on the first SSD, every time I boot.

    I also have two multibay USB DAS. Mergerfs and snapraid. One DAS is used mainly for media file storage and for backups of important folders on my PC and Laptop, as well as backups of my phone (mostly photos) and tablet. The other DAS is used mainly for backups of the other DAS.