It is also going to be a conventional drive as they usually give some warning before they fail.
I had all my backups on a Seagate 4TB that failed in 2013 with no warnings whatsoever, so don't count on that. The irony was that I bought that drive just to back-up my data, and it was the first one to die. Looked at the product reviews on Amazon, and about 45% of the low scores were exactly for sudden deaths. Looked at Western Digital and Samsung drives, same thing. They now ask us to pay twice the price for an "Enterprise" version of the drive that won't die overnight.
I am really in two minds as to weather to go conventional or just buy two cheap SSDs and clone them as some of the cheap ones on Amazon have a five year warranty.
That is the way I decided to go I moved my back up copy of the runtimes and other Poser files from my NAS onto another SSD and the 'C' drive is also a SSD. The off site back up is now being moved onto couple of conventional drives that I can rotate, they are not as fast but, like this time, I just let the upload to the SSD run overnight.On my side, I do not trust SSD for backups, not to mention mechanical drives are much cheaper for larger capacities. I reserve SSDs for quick boot drives, and drives where I need fast reading speeds when loading large files - namely Poser and AI. I used to think Poser files were large, but AI beats it by far. LOL
I can understand that but and my computer runs almost completely on SSDs but with conventional drives for back up, in part because I have some large conventional drives that still work. A lot depends on experience though, based on my experience with Crucial SSDs would have me fully supporting a full SSD system but based on my experience of Samsung SSDs I would have some concern.My last two computers were solely run on SSD drives. I'd actually trust them more than the old mechanical drives. BUt that's just my opinion.
My last two computers were solely run on SSD drives. I'd actually trust them more than the old mechanical drives. BUt that's just my opinion.