Actually the original IBM Personal Computer did not yet come with an internal hard drive, and neither did former Apple computers. Up till Seagate published the ST-506 5.25 inch, 5 megabyte hard drive, the really thought of having an internal hard drive was preposterous.
Pre-1980 hard drives were vast devices with platters either 8 inches or 14 inches wide and were informally concerned to as washing machines which you could make dance by decently timing search and reads.
The thought of storage enclosings being in a RAID format is also not a fresh thought, it is just considering another page from the server market where most if not all external enclosures come with various RAID levels. What is new is the idea of having a small light weight drive enclosing that can use normal 3.5” SATA hard drives and be capable to set them up in a RAID.
Simply lately Canadian-based Media sonic, a proportional arrival to the market, released two little external enclosures named the HUR1-SU2 and the HUR1-SU2FWB .
These devices are marketed as low-priced, instant storage results that are planned for archival backups, large-capacity portable storage, confidential or sensitive data storage or simply additional disk storage. Both of these units are small 2 bay enclosures that not only allow you to utilize some 3.5” SATA hard drive but also permit you to set them up in RAID 1 or 0.
Yet best still this needs no special hardware or software to be installed on the host computer. The enclosing take care of all the work, which makes these units fulfill, self confirmed hardware appliances that will work evenly well on Apple or PC computers.
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