Can I complain?
So my Gigabyte Z97X gaming 5 board with an I7 4790k has been acting up. Randomly the system would shut down and reboot under load, but not always. Sometimes it would do it randomly with no load (browsing webs), sometimes I could play games like D3 or WoW or FF14 for hours without issue, only to start a new game and it would reboot.
I figured, power supply. I ran over to Microcenter and got the same supply I have, just a newer model. I carefully unplugged each "module" from the prior one and plugged them into the same, correct spots on the new one, sat it in the case, and pressed the power button. Click...and nothing. I saw the water cooler fan kick in, but that was it. I tried again. And again. I double-checked it was all plugged in, and it was - MB to MB, CPU to CPU, both VGA power cables, the SATA, the fans (peripherals), all of it. Finally I held the button down for 5 seconds and it turned on! Huzzah!\
I smelled burning rubber immediately. I unplugged everything but it was too late. I watched the center wire in the 3-wire set connecting from the board to the power switch of the case melt. I unplugged everything but board and video card, and then shorted the power on the board to force it on. It booted! Wow! However, I found quickly that the cable to the power button wasn't the only thing to melt - the power to my 2TB SSD burned, badly:
Long story short, I had to run out to Microcenter three times and ended up spending $1800 to essentially replace my entire system (I7 8700k, 16gb DDR4). I've lost everything. For years I've told myself to back up my system but I've never bothered to get around to it. Now I've paid the price. I'm going to try to recover the drive, but it's a long shot.
That sucks, @Darsithis. D:
I have to say, it's impressive that you're asking if you can "complain"... that would be far too mild a description for my mood. I'd probably be raging if that happened to me. You think you're doing the right thing by replacing a faulty part only to replace it with one that's an order of magnitude worse. Fucks sake...
Speaking of backups (since I functionally don't have any either), what options do you guys employ / recommend? I've considered either buying a simple NAS enclosure or building a small server. Either way, I'd plop in several large capacity HDDs and run RAID 5. Thoughts? Some family member use some offsite backup service - Backblaze, I believe? - but I'm not sure how I feel about going that route.
Heh, thanks man but no time. I've gotta get a lot of overtime in to cover this.
Oh I was ragey. I went from testing BfA to rebuilding a computer until 1am.
Well an easy way is an external drive. That's what I originally planned to do and probably could still do, as long as the external SSD is kept safe you really shouldn't have an issue. It certainly won't get fried
Oh let's add some insult to injury, though...one of the new 1TB SSD's I bought to replace the 2TB (for some reason, they don't sell the 2TB anymore), is defective...
Surprisingly decent
https://www.anandtech.com/show/13054...aptop-displays
Gah! Are you mostly (mostly) back in business now?
True, true. I guess I was thinking of both a backup and storage, hence looking at RAID5. Still, an external SSD would be better than no backup at all.
Rage...
(I spy a graphics calculator! I actually had a TI-85 when I was pretty young. Writing BASIC programs on it was my first experience programming.)
Yeah I have both of my new 1TB SSDs in place, I'm on fiber so I've got 500gb of games re-downloaded. My saves are all cloud so most of my games haven't lost any progress. I've just lost everything else, but I hope to recover it soon. The problem is recovery is $400 - $2000
Yes, exactly! Depends on your ISP, though, maybe uploading to a cloud service is a good idea. Carbonite or CrashPlan are both good choices.
Ah, you've been misled! That is actually my dad's crappy little medical-service cell phone I'm holding for him while he's in prison. Though, funny enough, thanks to my partner going to school to be an accountant a few years ago, we have quite a pile of those calculators lying around somewhere if I bothered to look...
Actually kind of fun to note that RAID is the worse for corruption despite it typically is championed as the best for data back up, cause you know, it copies the corruption too. It's better to keep a history of images to select from along with an ECC capable system for single and double bit flip corrections. The latter though require more specialized hardware for Intel and some more digging for AMD's Ryzen. Ryzen CPU supports it but the motherboard typically doesn't or not validated so it's not guaranteed.
With the, I think, 250GB data-cap on my family's house internet plan per month, I'm weary of cloud backups. I could do imaging, but does that compress it, or keep it at the same size?
Comcast. /puke
I can't complain about my download speed (150-180 mbps) at least, though my upload speed isn't great (5-10 mbps). I have a data cap of 1TB, so outside the initial backup, I'd probably be fine... I think.
@Remilia @Butler Log @ DeltrusDisc
All those different backup methods (including "full paranoid"), and not a single mention of tape backups? I am very disappointed.
Re: RAID
I wasn't thinking that RAID was the be all, end all of backups or anything, just giving some resiliency to backup failure due to a drive failure. I've probably experienced a bit flip error at some point, but I can't say I've ever identified one.
Boring? Boo, boo!
That sounds like a nice, practical system, actually. How do you deal with large binary files that you don't change often, like say, a music collection? It doesn't seem like the target of your system, which is entirely fair.
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A bit OT, but just a bit of an etiquette question: I know I'm not always the most punctual with replies (I only ever really have time to post after I get home from work) and sometimes I want to reply to multiple posts at once, but it feels like I'm not only slapping the thread with a wall of text, but also making replies to posts on topics that have sort of fallen out of scope.
Should I avoid making replies to posts that haven't been touched in X days?
Should I avoid replying to multiple posts at once? If so, how many would you recommend?
I'm probably overthinking this, but it has come up more than once where I've debated whether I should reply or not that I figured I should at least ask.
@Alindra I didn't mention tape backup because they are way too expensive for a home user in my opinion.
They do, however, make your data practically immune to even the worst cryptolocker, because they can't overwrite the backup just takes a while to read it back off the tape