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By submitting your email, you acknowledge Western Digital's Privacy Statement and agree to receive communication from Western Digital that includes newsletters, updates, and promotions related to Western Digital's products. You can withdraw your consent at any time. As the many users running RAID 5 with 2 TB disks can tell you, reality prooved the myth wrong then, and it probably will this time also.
So more than the claimed Do I believe that Samsung are ten times better in this respect than the competitive products? No I don't, I think they are all in the same ballpark. Samsung don't sell any enterprise models of their disks, but the other manufacturers wan't to have something that motivates the much higher price enterprise disks are carrying.
So I'm convinced the others are under-specifying their desktop disks. Of course the theory holds in the respect that with larger disks URE will have to eventually come down. The problem is that a single figure with a somewhat questionable validity on a datasheet can't be used as the sole basis for such an analysis. But it made a great headline, created a lot of hits on the blogg and became a myth that will have to be crushed, and then crushed again, and then crushed again, and then crushed again That said, a URE can actually happen any time.
And if you're unlucky enough to have it with a degraded RAID 5-volume, you will loose that volume. So if you're worried, that's the way to go. And this is also one reason why my signature is true. The backup is an insurance against events like when a URE actually does destroy your data.
And it also protects you from many other threats. Edit: spelling. Last edited by P3R on Mon Feb 21, am, edited 1 time in total. RAID have never ever been a replacement for backups.
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