Originally posted by: XplosiV
A couple of good uses for old 'Under 1GB Hdd's'
1) Use as a slave for virtual memory only.
2) Use in a caddy with 2 or more PC's to transfer MP3's or other data between them.
3) Use as a backup disk for more delicate files that you might not need to update so much, could be kept in a safe or something.
Are you kidding ???
These are the WORST possible drives for virtual memory. "under 1gb Hdds" are generally PIO modo 1 or 2 drives, they are very very very very very very very very very very very very slow (like between 1MB and 3MB per second). Using them for virtual memmory is a VERY bad idea, they will lag the CPU. Also, these olde drives have extremely high CPU utilization (i believe its because they do not have direct memmory access.)
This is a combination of using lead life jackets aboard boats and paddling a canoe with a fork and putting the door to the refrigerator on the bottom so you have to suspend it from the ceiling and everything falls out when you open it!
Also, for scenario 2, why not just use a cdrw??? Burning a cd at 16x or more will be faster then an ancient hard drive and it will be a lot smaller, lighter, and more durable to carry around. (sure cdrs are fragile ... but they don't die if you shake them a little bit. Also, buying a cady is more expensive than 100 cheap cd-rs, so unless you already own the cady, it would probably not be worth payng for one.
3. OK ... this scenario has some merit, however, I don't know how much I would trust a 10+ year old hard drive with important data. Using the mindset of "it hasn't failed yet, why would it any time soon" isn't really smart when it comes to anything important. I tend to think "MTBF for these things is like 5 or so years, this drive is well overdue ... I had better be carefull with it" . I would suggest to use tape and back important data up at least once per week, or just burn it to cds/dvds, and be sure to make at least 2 copies of anything REALLY important.
IMO the best use for really small hard drives would be to throw several of them in a box, and run a server. 2 or 3 500MB drives is plenty for a slack install (heck, 1 x 500 is enough for a slack install).
You can build a pretty badass firewall/NAT box, mail server, print server, dns server, ircd server, shell server, usefull network utility box (for things like nmap & sniffers) and/or an IRC box (Bitchx and Eggdrop) and still have room to spare.
(Disclaimer so that the BSD people (ok .. maybe just n0cmonkey) do not behead me: You could of course use a variant of BSD as well and get great results, however I personally favor linux, so that is why I recommended slackware.)