JeffreyVB wrote in post #18995585
New year, new resolutions, right??? Looking to revamp my home PC setup this year. Looking for recommendations for an external HDD/SDD for archival of photos sets. Speed is not critical, but I would like some relatively fast. Want something reliable that I can use for semi long term. I work in IT, so I know nothing lasts forever, but I would like to be able to reliably use it 5-8 years with no worries of data loss. Home HDD? Portable HDD? SSD? Western Digital has always been my go to. Looked at some GTech drives on Amazon, but hey had iffy reviews. Like the form factor of the Samsung portable SSDs. This would connect to a 2018 Mac Mini, so I prefer a USB-C connection. What do you guys use? Any recommendations? Anything to stay clear off?
I don't think anything will meet your requirements. 5-8 years with no data loss is virtually impossible. A disk could fail whether SSD or HDD, an enclosure could fail (they're built on the cheap), a virus could wipe the data, ransomware could encrypt everything, you could be robbed, etc.
The closest I think you'll get for archives is using AWS S3 Glacier Deep Archive Tier, at $1/TB/month with versioning enabled. It's effectively immutable, it's stored in three different data centers, it's regularly checked for corruption and repaired from other copies if required. 5TB would cost you $60 per year, so costs more than a hard disk, but is a LOT more reliable.
Alternately if you just want good quality, buy an HGST drive
, buy a decent quality dock, and run good incremental backup software
. Of course, given this is archive not just backup and data may not exist anywhere else you should get two drives, a decent case
, and keep one disk offsite. In that case you could do what I do, store medium res photos / videos on S3 as a second line backup.