Quote Originally Posted by Gman View Post
I have SSDs that are about 5 years old and they have plenty of life left in them. Mechanical drives are cheaper per GB, but SSDs are pretty tough to wear out unless you're doing a ridiculous amount of writes. If you're really concerned about losing data, setup regular backups to an on-prem NAS or to 'the cloud'.
Quote Originally Posted by brutal View Post
$99/year for O365 with 6x1TB accounts (there's a way to nest them together for a larger namespace if needed).

You get all the standard O365 desktop apps, O365 apps for the mobile devices. I tried to get by with OpenOffice and just couldn't stand the lack of real Excel formula/vb code support. Having Excel and word on my personal PC is great.

The sync and versioning is great. Easiest one I've found since Sugarsync (which went pay) to put the Onedrive local folder location where *I* want it, etc.

I back up local and everything critical goes to the cloud as well. I can get to it from anywhere and selectively get data/folders on my work PC, etc.
Quote Originally Posted by brutal View Post
Run the utilities to keep an eye on the wear rates- but of course backups are essential.

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How is this done?


Quote Originally Posted by Gman View Post
I have O365 as well. My Synology NAS also supports synchronization of files to OneDrive. Even if the house burns down, I can still get to the important stuff.

Fire is a real concern as we're at greater risk here. I haven't used or trusted cloud services but I know it's universal now so I will look into everyone's suggestions. My wife puts certain files on OneDrive from her office. At home our web service is too slow for cloud backup--our cell phone hotspots are our only access (we need them for travel). I suppose I should put one SSD backup in the truck and keep it there.



Quote Originally Posted by Mazin View Post
Just a heads up I have had funky issues with usb's before as well just before the motherboard goes out. Keep doing you backups and check them. If you start to have HW issues or even driver issues I'd suggest getting a new system.
Good advice I'm sure, thank you.

About SSD's, what brands/models do you all recommend? Any that you like best, and maybe more important, any that one should avoid?