On Tue, Jan 27, 2004 at 01:13:23PM -0700, Preston Crawford wrote: > > I understand the simplicity of swapping drives out to run different > > OSes, but I've seen too many of those beasties fry systems or drives > > to trust them. Your mileage may vary, however, and the really well made > > drive drawer systems can be useful, but you have been warned. > > I appreciate the warning. I don't plan on "hot-swapping" them (I don't even know how you'd hot-swap an OS), just for the record. I plan on shutting down, swapping, then booting up again. Does above still hold true under that scenario? If so, then I'll give the dual boot off the second drive a try. Preston, please set your mail reader to wrap lines. 74 characters per line would be nice. Thank you. Even without hot swapping, those removable drive carriers are a disaster waiting to happen. I've taught in classrooms where everyone had their own hard drive for each class and everyone plugged in at the beginning of the class and unplugged at the end. We saw the carriers wear out quickly. Loose contacts mean erratic failures, which meant corrupted file systems. In once case, we had to re-install Linux several times in a semester for one student. We didn't care all that much, as the hard drives' contents were expendible. I doubt that's true of your home machine. Also, if you swap between two drives, you have no simple way to transfer files between them. Having two drives in the computer gives you this. Plus, why spend the money if you don't have to. For your own system, avoid them. > > Preston > > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list -- Charles Curley /"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign Looking for fine software \ / Respect for open standards and/or writing? X No HTML/RTF in email http://www.charlescurley.com / \ No M$ Word docs in email Key fingerprint = CE5C 6645 A45A 64E4 94C0 809C FFF6 4C48 4ECD DFDB
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