Buku panduan harddisk desktop eksternal toshiba 3 tb

Reviews HardDisk External Toshiba 3.0 1TB Canvio BasicBelanja di Softcom membuat Anda lebih Mudah, Aman & Terpercaya

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Toshiba canvio for desktop 3 TB USB 3.0 Black

High memory capacity. High speed
Save the largest digital libraries and access with canvio for desktop quickly.

Save the largest digital libraries and access with canvio for desktop quickly make, with up to 6 TB storage space and super high USB 3.0 transfer rate. The compact piano black design makes it an elegant desktop accessory. It can be set up horizontally or vertically. An internal shock sensor and the ramps charging technology to ensure that your drive is safe, and you can use the pre-installed software files, folders or the entire system backup and restore.

Stylish and powerful
The housing of the canvio for desktop is in the stylish piano black manufactured and can be lying down or vertically. Thanks to the special internal shock sensor and the ramp charging technology, your data is always protected

Fast data transmission
Canvio for desktop hard drives USB 3.0 technology, in order to data up to ten times faster than with USB 2.0 (is supported). Combine this with up to 6 TB storage space and you can also manage the largest files with ease.

Auto-backup software
The pre-installed software NTI ® Backup Now EZ™ automated backup and recovery for files, folders, and the whole system. You have one worry less!

Additional Security
Protect your personal data and secure the drive itself using the opening for a security lock.

Compatible for PC and Mac
Canvio for desktop hard drives have a NTFS driver for Mac included in delivery. In this way, you can save and access files from PC and Mac, without the need to reformat.

* For use with Apple Time Machine, reformatting HFS+ required."

Environmentally friendly cut-off
The environment-friendly switch-off function helps you to consume less power, without affecting the performance of the hard disk.

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Highlights & Details

  • 3 TB storage capacity
  • USB 3.0 interface
  • Automatic cut-off when not in use
  • Auto-backup software
  • This text is machine translated.

Delivery

  • Canvio for Desktop
  • Power supply with cable
  • Replaceable plug head (EU/GB)
  • USB 3.0 cable 
  • Pre-installed software
  • User Guide (pre-installed on the hard disk).

System Requirements

  • Windows® 7
  • Windows® 8.1
  • Windows® 10

Buku panduan harddisk desktop eksternal toshiba 3 tb

Comments

Buku panduan harddisk desktop eksternal toshiba 3 tb

4.0 out of 5 stars It is really 9.09 GB large
Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2020

The hard drive is a-okay, but the advertised sizes isn't real. It's really almost 10% smaller. I reformatted the drive to NTFS from a FAT formatted drive. It took close to 15-18 hours to reformat, but when it was done...the space on the drive 9.09 TB as usable space. The bytes displays as 10,000,829,247,488 bytes...which is 10 TB. Not 100% sure why more of the drive isn't accessible.Everything else seems to be in line...I would purchase again, but virtually 1 TB not being available is kind of sad.

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Top reviews from the United States

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Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2019

bought this for time machine backups, (which I'm new to) and after reading the reviews i was second-guessing, but then i read pretty much all other device reviews, found they're all avg at best, and decided to stick with WD.

tl;dr: glad i did! the device works pretty close to as expected, and is fit for purpose.

first, the software. really cool that they have a customized acronis true image version available for free download, but it's only for windows, so i haven't tested as i wanted to see if i could manage the device entirely from macOS after seeing that the management software supports both; which was honestly a surprise! unfortunately, while both the WD Drive Utilities and WD Discovery are buggy, I found that the former works more reliably and is far less intrusive IMO. The latter I found will continually startup at boot/1st-login despite telling it not to. Further, the WD Discovery makes me a bit nervous with the "expose your files to the public internet" cloud mode. I prefer to not even go down that path of potential attack surface.

I very much like the fact that there is a separate firmware updater that despite my drive coming with the latest version seemed to allow me to re-flash; so i did. however, tbh, i'm not sure if it actually did anything; as either it's the fastest firmware flash i've ever seen or it didn't _actually_ do it.

finally, in the software category, i didn't play with WD Security as despite WD's reputation, recent research has shown that disk manufacturers are not to be trusted when it comes to crypto; so i'm sticking with OS/software level encryption...at least for the moment.

the drive comes configured in raid-0, so of course i immediately reconfigured for raid-1. this is where both of the management utilities continually crashed. however, both did properly configure the device; as confirmed by multiple reconfigurations, re-flashing, re-wiping, and testing connectivity and flag files on disk. again, i decided to stick with the WD Drive Utilities from here on out so YMMV if you decide to go with WD Discovery.

at this point i started the backup process which took only ~4h for 725GB (encrypted mbp 1TB flash storage source) w/o crypto; not as bad as i was expecting tbh...especially given the 5400RPM speeds of the red disks included. I then simulated a disk failure by yanking one of the disks, and attempting to connect via sata/ide convertor directly to a macos vm (via usb) to see if i could read the contents. unfortunately, the disk was in an "unrecognized" format for macos; which is SOP IME when dealing w/ hardware raid controllers. leaving that disk out, i was able to recover files successfully on both my original macOS system as well as a macOS vm using the device. however, after plugging the removed drive back in i found i had to rebuild the array :( not a big deal for a raid-1 or JBOD configuration, but BEWARE IF YOU'RE RUNNING RAID-0. I did confirm prior to this testing that just removing a drive and replacing it WITHOUT connecting/reading/writing in another device did NOT force a rebuild. YMMV!

moreover, i was debating between this and the 4 drive configuration with the open bays for quick swapping drives, but i actually prefer this device since it's trivial to pop the top of the device (plastic "tool" included, but a regular screwdriver or your pocket knife will work just as well) reveals 2 "just as quick" bays (with better dust protection :)

finally, we come to encrypted time machine backups. apparently apple just encrypts the drive outright, and locks it w/ the passphrase; which is a reasonable design decision IMO. however, i found that after 3 days my 3TB (again, raid-1 config) was only ~30% which translates to a ~10d encryption process. i actually tried this before the previous paragraph's test (hence my pulling of the drives w/o the convertor test) and found that macos does reliably prompt for the backup passphrase. however, this report lacks the final, full encrypted testing as i went for the unencrypted full disk backup+consumer DR testing first; opting to add in the encryption after the fact. given most consumers' risk/threat profiles tho i doubt this will be a concern; especially since there are several recent articles regarding not encrypting backups at all; given the added risk WRT use-cases.

in conclusion, i give this product 4 stars out of 5 for generally working as expected, being fit for purpose, but software crashing on macOS (presumably JustWorksTM on windows). having to do it all over again, i'd probably compute the 12 or 20TB configuration's storage price vs the 6TB i bought and compare it to the raw drive price, (the hw raid controller should effectively be free :) but overall i'm happy with this purchase and the price point. i will update further if future testing provides any significant results/issues especially as i plan on picking up a single replacement 3TB red drive for post crypto DR scenario testing as well.

HTH

Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2020

I had a Drobo for a few years. I felt safe in the knowledge that if a drive failed that I wouldn't lose any data. I do regular backups but losing your main drive is still a pain.

So, did a drive fail? Nope. The whole Drobo did. Drobo's solution? Buy a new one and recover your data. This convinced me that RAID is just an expensive, over-complicated mess.

When the Drobo died I didn't lose any data but I decided not to bother with that again. This drive was 1/3rd the price of an EMPTY Drobo. I'm still doing regular backups so my risk is exactly the same as it was before. If it dies, I'll buy another one. I can do it several times before I've spent as much as the Drobo cost.

This drive (10TB) is much smaller physically than I expected it to be. It's not much bigger than the Intel NUC that it's connected to. It's pretty quiet except for vibrations that were getting amplified by the desk I have it on. I solved this by putting some felt circles on each of the rubber feet to isolate it from the desk. I occasionally hear chatter when it's working hard but most of the time you can't hear anything.

I'm using the drive as my NAS connected to an Intel NUC which serves up network shares. There's very little activity on it except when I'm backing up my other computers to it or when it's doing it's own maintenance tasks (backups, etc). The speed is fine since the limiting factor for transfers is the network it's attached to.

I'm only using about 35% of the capacity at the moment so hopefully it lasts a long time.

Reviewed in the United States on August 10, 2022

A friend had recommended this brand to me, and it was the best suggestion ever! The large amount of space for the price cannot be beat! I even ordered another one!

Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2017

Do the homework before you buy, there is a WORLD of difference between this one, and the competition that sells for $20 less.

Good news first. If you were to buy this unit, and just throw away the case and save the hard drive - you would SAVE about ~$100 from buying the bare hard drive alone. Yes, read that again, WD is GIFTING you a Helium filled, NAS quality (as in Enterprise grade) 8TB hard drive that retails for nearly $300 for a bare drive, for ~$190. Don't take my word for it, do a search for the WD80EZZX and see what you find - that's what they are sticking in this black box.

The competition, is sticking an inferior technology, pretty unreliable hard drive (Sept 1-19th reviews shows 12 out of 62 reviews with 1 star; that's 20% FAILURE) being stuck inside their box, and you are saving $20. Now, ask yourself - would you rather save $20 and run a 20% chance of losing your data? Are your taxes, your pictures, movies, games, homework, business receipts and emails worth the extra $20? Would coming home to find that years worth of data is irretrievably gone make you more angry, than saving $20 makes you happy?

Seriously, this is your money, not mine. My use is simple - this is a backup device for my Mac. This drive will typically come formatted with exFAT so it will work for both Windows and Mac. I never trust anything that comes from anyone, because I don't know nor do I trust any manufacturer. So, I ALWAYS format every storage device; this will be formatted for my Mac; so I will KNOW that the drives have no malware, no Trojans, nothing on the drive that I didn't put on there myself. I will then use it for a backup device. If I were to use it for my Windows machine, I would format it to NTFS and install my Windows Backup software, but this is my decision; you are (naturally) free do do what you want. I just suggest that you strongly consider doing something similar.

What good is having a backup device, if the backup device is unreliable? Would you trust a seatbelt that was defective? Would you use a defective parachute? Why would anyone use a defective hard drive in a backup device? The choice is yours, I humbly suggest you chose wisely.

Top reviews from other countries

1.0 out of 5 stars RAID-1 setup, enclusure goes unreliable within 6 months, lose all data since it's encrypted

Reviewed in Canada on February 23, 2019

Be careful. If you're thinking like i did: Hey, lets get a nice RAID-1 setup with 2x 6TB drive that are exact copy of each other and then i can rely on it completely to since if a drive fails, the other is intact.... well... think of buying something else.
I bought this in August 2018, now in February 2019 (6 months later) the enclosure died on me.
Fun fact: The encryption key died with the enclosure as well so my data is lost on both of these drives.
Now you're thinking, oh, i'll just disable encryption... well... nope, you just can't. Encryption is enabled on these drives by default and it cannot be turned off.
Paying $660 for a RAID-1 array that has chances of losing all your data is a bad idea. I learned the hard way so you don't have to.
Avoid this if you want to safeguard your data.

Edit: I just received the replacement 12TB MyBook Duo from the Western Digital RMA process. They sent me back a new enclosure but the drives inside are RECERTIFIED white labeled Red drives. This is yet another deception to receive recertified drives after a replacement of a 6 month old $600 product. I also do not trust their enclosure anymore, due to the hardware encryption mentionned above, i am spending another $200 on a 3rd party OWC Dual drive enclosure that does support hardware RAID-1 without encryption. Overall, i will have spend about $900 with the original product, shipping of RMA and 3rd party enclosure to finally have a 6TB RAID-1 array and i'm on recertified drives... not even new. Want to play the lottery? This could happen to you. Stay away from this product.

1.0 out of 5 stars DRIVE DEAD AFTER LESS THAN A YEAR; UNRELIABLE, DO NOT BUY

Reviewed in Canada on June 6, 2018

Absolute garbage. I've had this drive for less than a year and it is now dead (I've troubleshot everything; not recognized on two different computers even by disk manager). Apparently warranty is for some reason void when trying to go through WD support despite being less than a year. Save yourself the headache and avoid this brand.

1.0 out of 5 stars Came locked in "ReadOnly" mode, couldn't be changed. FAIL.

Reviewed in Canada on January 20, 2019

Figured I'd back up another WD 1T external drive that has gone "ReadOnly".
This 4T came formatted in ex-fat and "ReadOnly" Tried everything to get it into Write/Read...no joy.
Went thru the help stuff to no avail. Called WD went thru the stuff that should've fixed it, but it didn't.
The WD guy called it faulty. Shame, it's the first WD product that failed me in over 20 years.
Leaving the drives unformatted might be a good idea. Let the end user decide how to format the drives they bought.

5.0 out of 5 stars Western Digital is fast dependable storage. This is my 5th drive, I won't buy anything else.

Reviewed in Canada on August 30, 2018

This is my 5th Western Digital My Book. The reason that I have five is because they are solid drives at an outstanding price. They are not the fastest out there they spin @ 5400 rpm vs a faster drive at 7200 rpm but they turn in (up to) a respectable transfer rate of 150 mb/sec.

I am not a causual user. Two of my drives run as expanded memory on Bell Expressvu and Fibe receivers and have been performing that job flawlessly and reliably for years. They take a fair amount of abuse. Both receivers recognize and work with the My Books beautifully.

My third drive was given the unenviable task as serving as my animation drive for my work producing animation, this thing reads and writes huge quantities of data A LOT and the thing is just a solid performer and drive metrics show that no matter how hard it works, it stays cool.

This last one simply serves as a backup to everything on my PC's internal drive. At this price and capacity, there was no hesitation to get another one to safe guard my important data. I am more than willing to make the safe bet that a 6th is in my future at some point.

This latest (4TB) drive is being used as a stand alone media drive for my smart TV and all the space and performance makes it work as if it was an integrated component, As always, I could not be happier.

I have recommended these drives to friends and those that have bought them - love them. You will too...

2.0 out of 5 stars Loud but effective

Reviewed in Australia on April 28, 2019

The 10tb WD My Book is by far the loudest external drive I’ve ever owned.

The clicking is comparable to louder desktop and NAS HGST drives on the noisy end of the scale. That I’m not even complaining about.

This drive has a constant humming from the rotation that is awful in the living room for movies.

This is worse than a WD Black put in an enclosure which are normally louder.

This is louder than my previous 3tb WD USB, 6tb Seagate USB and NAS with two drives combined.