• alucard (they/them)
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    93 days ago

    Why is Seagate a problem in your opinion? I’ve been looking for NAS and it seems I’m still uneducated in that department.

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      293 days ago

      Same reason the next person after them will say the same for WD, the next one Toshiba, the next one Hitachi.

      Bad experiences sour your perception of a brand.

      • @sidtirouluca@lemm.ee
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        31 day ago

        i would base my judging on backblaze spreadsheet, google it, its a cool site. i dont care about HDDs anymore, but Seagate there always has high failure rates.

      • ☂️-
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        3 days ago

        tbf seagates do have a higher fail rate than the others.

        mine is going strong for a decade now, but that doesn’t mean they are reliable as a brand.

    • Mike
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      93 days ago

      In my case, because I watched that Louis Rossmann video where he said he basically has a business today because of all the failures of Seagate drives.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFscU8JUohA

      There’s a benchmark, and Seagate is above all other brands on failure rate.

      • @jonesy@aussie.zone
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        213 days ago

        A good resource I’ve found is Backblaze’s drive statistics reports, as they report on failure rates and issues for all of their drives by specific model: https://www.backblaze.com/blog/category/cloud-storage/hard-drive-stats/

        All manufacturers can and sometimes do make trash drives, and Seagate have a number of specific models that have very low fail rates. That said, they also have a larger number of drives with high failure rates than other manufacturers. Regardless, always research the specific drive model you are considering before purchasing to avoid surprises later.