Huh, so there's no way to know what's where? That sucks.I'm very happy with mine - just wish I could specify which files went where to ensure that gb's of photos aren't hogging the ss bit. But so far seems ok.
I'm very happy with mine - just wish I could specify which files went where to ensure that gb's of photos aren't hogging the ss bit. But so far seems ok.
Yes I thinking the same. What I'm worry about is that OS X control where the files go, what if one drive failed. Then I will lost a part of my file? This is the only reason stopping me from upgrading. I haven't order mine yet, will see.
I'm very happy with mine - just wish I could specify which files went where to ensure that gb's of photos aren't hogging the ss bit. But so far seems ok.
Yes I thinking the same. What I'm worry about is that OS X control where the files go, what if one drive failed. Then I will lost a part of my file? This is the only reason stopping me from upgrading. I haven't order mine yet, will see.
umm, for a lot of us the main benefit is precisely that we don't have to manually manage what goes on what drive. I know this kind of mental gymnastic would be unbearable to me, I am not good at putting stuff where they belong, and the fact that I don't get a performance penalty for not putting stuff where they belong is a huge plus.
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this is a strange way of seeing things? I am not sure I understand:
- If you only have one drive and it fails, don't you lose your stuff too?
- If you have two drives and one fail, don't you use what's on the failing drive?
If you have a solid backup plan (and you should), no matter if you use 1 drive, 2 drives, or a fusion drive, the restoring process will be the same:
- Replace the failing drive
- Restore your files from the backup