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Archive for December 17th, 2009

New Installation Video: Make your Mac mini Server a storage giant.

Thursday, December 17th, 2009 | Author: OWC Chris S.

giant-miniHey installation video junkies! What with all the Holiday Specials, nifty new products, and stories of OWC and NewerTech products “in the wild,” one might think we’ve forgotten about you, the avid upgrader who wants to get the most out of their Macs and relies on us to show you how to do it.

Well, it’s not just fantasy, the long wait is over – we’ve got a new video for you. This time around, we’ll show you how to upgrade the hard drives in the Mac mini Server.

In case you didn’t know, the mini Server comes with two 500GB, 5400rpm hard drives installed. That’s it. No options for anything bigger from Apple. So, by design, if you need to add more storage, you’d normally have to do it by connecting external drives.

While the NewerTech miniStack (or for that matter, any OWC or NT external storage solution) is great for this sort of thing, it does nothing to speed up those internal drives. That’s the unfortunate limitation of USB and FireWire – they just can’t compare to the speeds of a SATA connection.

With this latest video, however, that all changes. We show you how to swap out the drives inside and replace them with larger, faster or even solid state drives. No matter what you’re putting in, the instructions are all the same.

So get your NewerTech 11-piece Tool Kit and your thin putty knife out, then head on over to our Tech Center or our YouTube Channel to check out how to perform the upgrade.

Of course, if the thought of disassembling your Mac mini Server into its component parts causes you to feel weak in the knees and see spots before your eyes, we also offer an installation service, so you can enjoy the benefit of an upgraded mini Server without the muss and fuss of having to disassemble your Mac mini on your kitchen table.

No matter what upgrade route you choose, though, OWC is there to help you get the most out of your Mac mini Server!

Buy now and have it shipped for free in time for Christmas.

Thursday, December 17th, 2009 | Author: OWC NewsFeed

SantaGlobe

We’ve got about a week left before Christmas, which means it’s the final countdown for getting all your parcels together. OWC’s got a lot of great holiday specials that someone in your family is sure to love.

Fortunately, OWC is located just outside Chicago. Our location near the geographic center of the country (hence the moniker the “Midwest”) and proximity to a major shipping hub means that roughly 70% of USA ship to locations are actually only 2-3 days away by typical ground delivery options. Even the furthest points on the West and East Coasts served by ground typically only have five days of transit time.

That means that if you order today and have it shipped by Ground, you’ve still got a good buffer for getting it by the 24th. And if that order happens to be more than $150, the Ground shipping is free to the 48 contiguous United States.

Of course, if you like to cut it close, qualifying orders via 2nd Day Air placed as late as 8:30PM on next Tuesday, December 22nd and qualifying orders by Overnight Air placed as late as 10:30PM on next Wednesday, December 23rd, will still be delivered by Thursday, Christmas Eve.

And, especially for you professional procrastinators, you’ll want to check out our new Priority Processing shipment option. Order as late as 10:30PM Central Time and select our OWC Priority Processing shipment option for nearly guaranteed Same Day Ship Out! Check out our Shipping page for more details.

No matter what your shipping needs, OWC’s here to make your holiday gift giving a breeze.

Make sure your backup strategy is protecting you.

Thursday, December 17th, 2009 | Author: OWC Chris S.

OWC-Helmet

We talk a lot about backing up around here; I’d say it has been the third-most popular topic here on the OWC Blog, behind memory upgrades and price specials. In fact, OWC Mike H. posted a piece about backing up early last week.

However, this time around, I’d like to take a slightly different track that we don’t always cover – even with automated services like Time Machine, backing up still needs to be an active process.

In the interest of full disclosure, I’ll relate that this particular topic stems from recent personal experience. Earlier this month, my father (who I help with the upkeep on his Mac mini at his company) had his main hard drive fail on him.

“No problem,” I thought, “I set up an automated nightly backup on the system. All I need to do is replace the internal drive, then restore from the backup and we’ll be good to go.”

Unfortunately, it wasn’t quite that simple. Sure, we made annual backups to CDs, mostly for record-keeping purposes, but trusted that backup software to do the rest in between. The problem is that for some reason, the backup routine had stopped sometime over April of last year. As it had run reliably for quite some time prior to that point, we’d never checked it for consistency – that was our major mistake.

As a result, none of the data created since the beginning of the year was backed up when the hard drive went bad. Considering the amount of money involved with the data (I won’t go into details, but it is rather significant), the concept of losing it all is pretty much catastrophic.

There are a pair of lessons we can learn from this story:

1.) Automatic backups need to be periodically checked.

Check your backups from time to time just to make sure all the data is in good shape. In my case, it would have also helped to determine whether or not the darn thing was backing up in the first place. Believe me, the worst time to find out your backup is out of date or no good is on the day you need it.

2.) Make multiple copies of data you can’t afford to lose.

I also recommend keeping one or more these copies off-site, so if one backup fails (or is damaged, etc.) you at least have copies of the really important data somewhere.

Fortunately, OWC has all the equipment you need to set up or improve your backup strategy. From our award-winning external Storage Solutions, to recordable media, to replacement internal drives for ones that have failed, we have you covered.

Oh, as for our little story above, we were fortunate enough to be able to recover the “lost” data by using Prosoft Engineering’s Data Rescue 3. We hooked the failed drive up to another computer via an OWC Express enclosure, and let Data Rescue go at it. It took about a week to process, but from all the checks we’ve done, it appears that all the data that had once been “lost” has now been recovered.

I love a happy ending.