
LaCie Rugged Mini
5 TB
LaCie Rugged Mini
5 TB
this is when you break the file system... you may be using cache, which is located on the disk, and then you have to eject the disk properly...you can also simply not use the cache or use a file system that is more resistant to it (ext4 -> you can tear the disk out of the system, if an os is still running on it, put the disk back in and it usually runs again, btrfs -> you can shrink and enlarge a partition while it is running, you can make snapshots of it, but unfortunately it is not yet 100% production-ready) the problem is that windows doesn't support any reasonable file system at the moment, exfat is the best of all, but it's not the best by a long shot..., ntfs i wouldn't recommend at all, sometimes whole disks are destroyed if you just look at them crooked... (best to do both disks while making the backup...)
I would now go for USB-C on both sides. I have the other one and the plug doesn't hold well, so the connection is very unstable...
They are both the same size (dimensions) - the difference is the USB port on the hard drive. The "mini" has a USB 3.0 connection and the "normal" USB 3.1 with a USB-C connection (you may know this from your mobile phone).
With protection (oranges) W 85mm H 135mm D 30mm Without protection (plate only) W 76mm D 20mm H 118mm
lol coolest description of piracy ever! Windows and Apple do not use the same storage formats. In short, the Windows user has to install an open source solution to be able to use Apple formats, because Apple is completely useless in a networked world. https://www.minitool.com/data-recovery/read-mac-formatted-drive-windows.html