Nice crosspost. Thanks guys.
It sounds like a nano is the thing for me. I will promise not throw it up in the air after it's been repeatedly run over.
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
Nice crosspost. Thanks guys.
It sounds like a nano is the thing for me. I will promise not throw it up in the air after it's been repeatedly run over.
Nanos are tough, in my experience. I drop my nano at least once a week, plus Perkins the cat has decided that the earphone cord is one of his favorite toys (he's managed to pull it out of my purse more than once), and it's still fine.
NSM the ear buds, but they are cheap to replace.
I don't use the earbuds anyway, so that doesn't matter. I think I'll order the 8G nano. I'm cashing in some Visa points to get a gift card to help pay for it, so it'll have to wait a few weeks. In the meantime, I'll be probably playing my ipod on shuffle, since it requires the least navigation.
I've got an 8 GB nano that's pretty robust.
You can currently get a 320GB external Seagate hard drive at Best Buy for $99. If anyone else is looking to buy.
I just bought a PC at Fry's for $150 (after $100 rebate). I am such a sucker. I consider it some sort of odd virtue that I didn't buy the $179 PC, nor a new flatscreen monitor (I'm scared to check the specs of the one I have now, because if the $200+ one beats it...no, I need to learn restraint).
But basically I figure I've upgraded my Linux box from what was cheap and easy to get in 2000 to what's cheap and easy in 2007.
Next step? Find out how much I can upgrade the hardware itself.
I remember asking before what people did for backup and didn't get much. Do you guys not back up? Mirror? Anything?
I periodically use rsync to mirror my disk to an external drive.
For my Macs I do a complete disc image to either an external drive or a network drive.
I just tar stuff up on linux. $ tar -c /home/blah >backup.tar
Then bzip2 it for space.
I haven't backed anything up on the Mac yet. Although all my email is Gmail now, and all my documents are done on Google Docs & Spreadsheets, and my Firefox is synchronised with the Google bookmarks thing. Huh, Google appear to own my online life.
I also use Synchronize Pro on the Mac when I'm working on projects across multiple machines and want to keep my data in some sort of order.