Originally Posted by
eddiebell14
Hi and thanks for replying. Both really. Just wondered if there is a more efficient way of data wiping laptops. I stack PC's ontop of each other and use the one tft monitor, keyboard. Can something like this be done with laptops?
Thanks
Try the search term " hard drive wiping machine ".
It's generally pretty easy to remove hard drives these days. The thing i've found though is that a high percentage of laptop hard drives won't pass a surface test. Part & parcel with that is that the hard drives tend to be over 500 GB. The larger the capacity the drive ... the higher the chances it will have bad sectors AND the darn things take forever to wipe. You really should do a three pass overwrite if it's your intention to resell -or- destroy the data on the drive.
Near as i can tell ... traditional hard drives are rapidly becoming obsolete. That technology is being replaced by solid state drives.
You get the older SSD's in the 2.5" form factor
You get some M.2 sata drives but they aren't all that common.
Nowadays ... a good many manufacturers are soldering the data storage chip right to the board.
Another trend that's fairly commonplace is to have something like an 80 GB storage chip on the board and the rest of the storage takes place on the cloud.
Traditional sector by sector overwrites aren't done with SSD's. It's just a one step process. * click * .... and poof .... all of the data on the SSD is gone !
Another trend has been from laptops to tablets to small handheld devices.
When i look around at all of the rapid fire technological changes going on ... i don't see much of a future for traditional hard drives anymore. They are quickly going the way of the dinosaur just like floppy disks and cd/dvd's as storage media did. You might not to want to get too heavily invested there.
Bookmarks