Use RAID 1 for your OS. It is fault tolerant. You lose the hard drive to failure, you have a spare to move or repoint your boot.ini file. RAID 0 is not fault tolerant. You lose one drive, say bye bye ...
Hey everybody,<br><br>I could use some advice on how to divvy up my uses of my drives when I get my new RAID 0 setup in a few weeks. I'm a heavy computer arts user (graphic design, motion graphics, ...
How-To Geek on MSN
RAID 0 is a data-loss nightmare: Here is the only reason I still run it in my homelab
RAID 0 isn't worth it—unless you're backing it up every night ...
RAID takes the first place for data storing technology when you need high performance and reliability. It seems like having all facilities in a box such as large storage, fault-tolerance, parity check ...
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