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Indestructible Data: ioSafe at CES 2010

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Saivert 10th January 2010, 04:06 Quote
how about electrical surges? is the data cables going through all that foam inside protected from it?

hey it can take an excavator rolling over it but lightning strikes? oh boy..
outlawaol 10th January 2010, 06:15 Quote
Quote:
Originally Posted by Saivert
how about electrical surges? is the data cables going through all that foam inside protected from it?

hey it can take an excavator rolling over it but lightning strikes? oh boy..

Indeed. My parents live in the country and have had many a electronics fried from lightning. Oh the countless phones that they have gone through, I feared for my computers when I lived with them ( I would unplug everything I owned when a storm would roll in). And I think surge protectors are a slight gimmick... unless daisy chained in multiples.

On a totally unrelated note, does anyone know if you loop the cords from the outlet if that does anything in a lightning based surge? Something about the electromagnetic field generated cancels itself out. I dont know if it works or not, just heard about it. :)
friskies 10th January 2010, 10:53 Quote
overclockers.com had an article about that perticular thing, tieing a knot on power cables. According to them it would make electronics survive a lightning strike.
CozaMcCoza 10th January 2010, 11:51 Quote
Try dropping it 6 miles under the sea and then seeing if it's indestructible

Either way that's pretty impressive!
Yemerich 10th January 2010, 11:54 Quote
I have a recurring problem with excavators smashing my computers.

On a side note, I think I will build a bunker like that! So WWIII can come anytime!
Cupboard 10th January 2010, 17:46 Quote
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheiken
On their website it says:

"Crush Proof : up to 5000lbs in any axis"

So there you go naysayers...

That is only "up to" like broadband is often "up to" and never is. With my cynical hat on, that means that in one axis that will be fine but something else and it will just crumble.

The big problem I see with this is that if you have a large force on this (building collapse or similar) which then dumps the box in a large puddle (potentially from the water supply in the collapsed building) you are screwed - the SSD may survive the crushing but that has just destroyed the waterproofing! Its not like something like that can't happen, and I can imagine a similar situation with the innards being burnt.
Flintsteal 11th January 2010, 01:35 Quote
sweet now i don't need to worry about my house burning down from all the electronics I have daisey chained and loosing my pron collection. I am doubting there is a 1.5tb version though :S I guess i will still have to live in fear of loosing asian cheerleaders go wild #2.
Farfalho 11th January 2010, 16:21 Quote
ROFL x'D
TSR2 11th January 2010, 17:04 Quote
Unfortunately for that kind of money its possible to buy several enormous HDD's and scatter them all over the country.
kenco_uk 11th January 2010, 17:24 Quote
Quote:
Originally Posted by Furymouse
I would love to see all reviews of hardware done in such a manner

I'm sure bindi wouldn't mind running over a few motherboards using an excavator :)
Cupboard 11th January 2010, 18:35 Quote
and if none of them want to, I would happily step in :D
centy 22nd January 2010, 08:44 Quote
Yeah but can it handle a full format? :)
barndoor101 22nd January 2010, 09:03 Quote
Quote:
Originally Posted by Turbotab
But can it survive a few centimeters of snowfall?:|

yes, which makes it tougher than most southerners
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