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Hi I need a new hard drive but I dont know what size I should get?
And what should the speed be?
Is there a certin brand I should stay away from?
I would need the hard drive to back up Northon Ghost, and just youse the hard drive for home use??
CHEERS!!

2006-10-12 16:35:11 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

4 answers

What you have in the hard drive isn't memory--it's storage.

Memory lives in your memory sticks as RAM (random access memory) and it's elsewhere on your motherboard.

Your hard drive may include a function called VRAM, virtual memory, which can supplement your RAM.

Now that I have done my nitpicking, let me answer your question:

Hard drives are one of the best bargains around these days. I wouldn't get anything smaller than an 80 gigabyte hard drive, but go to your computer story or Best Buy and see what they have on sale.

My computer was built with a 20 gig hard drive and I decided to add storage. I bought a 60 gig on sale (a few years ago) and installed it along with the existing 20 gig. That gives me two hard drives with a combined 80 gigs, which is a lot of capacity.

If you do streaming video and music and all that sort of thing you will need some storage and you might want to upgrade your RAM while you are at it.

2006-10-12 16:49:19 · answer #1 · answered by Warren D 7 · 0 0

once you swap off your computing gadget the memory will erase, a not common rigidity will keep any concepts on it. my own opinion is to bypass with memory. Your computing gadget will run plenty swifter with 1or 2 gigs of memory and you will consistently off load added records to cd's, dvd's, or maybe purchase an exterior not common rigidity. memory advancements on the different hand could be a soreness in some computers.

2016-11-28 02:52:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can always get an external hard drive, they are good to use, get the fastest you can afford, good luck.

2006-10-12 16:38:49 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

as big as you can afford
if it's a laptop, 5400 rpm, 4200 for longer battery life
desktop, go big
no
sure, whatever you like, you bought it
cheers to you too!

2006-10-12 16:37:30 · answer #4 · answered by metallhd62 4 · 0 0

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