#3
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o.O My, that's a whole lot of music in there! And pictures, too! I back up my stuff to an external and the cloud when it starts to get a bit tight. I think I love micromanagement. (Failing that, for music, I can always redownload from iTunes)
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#4
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I edit videos. When capturing HD footage, I compress it with Pegasus Imaging's PICVideo MJPEG codec, which features a good balance of quality, CPU usage, and filesize. A typical 3-hour 720p60 or 1080i60 video may be 100 gigs or more, and a single night of gaming can eat through 300 gigs of space. Of course, these files get compressed down to only a few gigs each (and some boring videos just get deleted or scaled to smaller sizes). So yeah, I can vouch for the necessity of terabyte drives.
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#5
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Speaking of terabyte drives... Hmm, I've wondered about the Thunderbolt port that the laptop has. Thunderbolt... well, you could consider it as USB jacked up to eleven, faster than USB 3.0, even. The problem is that such devices are so expensive, it hurts. |
#6
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And yeah, you'd be surprised. I tend to backup DVDs that I buy so I can easily watch them whenever I want without having to pop the DVD into the DVD player. It adds up really fast. And then there's minecraft. Depending on the size of a world you play in, a world can take up to several gigabytes of drive space. |
#9
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Besides, I'm required to capture all 60 frames when recording in 480p or 720p, or it just won't work. |
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