Quote from gaj:
seagate offers free data recovery on bad hard drives:
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9126360
now, that's a confirmation of "BAD"!
Quote from gaj:
seagate offers free data recovery on bad hard drives:
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9126360
Yea, many reports of the new firmware toasting 500GB drives, seems to work fine on 1GB drives, for those that have been able to get the firmware flash to work.Quote from dcraig:
Oh dear, the firmware upgrade from Seagate seems to have made matters worse. As reported on slashdot:
http://stx.lithium.com/stx/board/me...&thread.id=5625&view=by_date_ascending&page=1
I'll answer your questions to the best of my ability, and as honestly as I can! I'm no statistician, but the 'drive becoming inaccessable at boot-up' is pretty much a very slim chance - but when you have 10 million drives in the field, it does happen. The conditions have to be just right - you have to reboot just after the drive writes the 320th log file to the firmware space of the drive. this is a log file that's written only occasionally, usually when there are bad sectors, missed writes, etc... might happen every few days on a computer in a nin-RAID home use situation.. and if that log file is written even one time after the magic #320, it rolls over the oldest file kept on the drive and there's no issue. It'll only stop responding IF the drive is powered up with log file #320 being the latest one written... a perfect storm situation. IF this is the case, then seagate is trying to put in place a procedure where you can simply ship them the drive, they hook it up to a serial controller, and re-flashed with the fixed firmware. That's all it takes to restore the drive to operation!
Quote from GTS:
For those interested in the gory details, a Seagate employee has been posting on slashdot (http://slashdot.org/~maxtorman) and gave this description of the problem: