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corrupted data after 2 months. finally died after only 3 months use. i assume the board overheats. hard drive was still good.
LaCie makes products that look wonderful. For this product in particular, I am already on power supply #2 (obtained only a few months after I bought it). Add to my first hand experience the information I read on tech forums, and I can't help but see an issue of systemic power failure in LaCie products. One might even be interested in knowing who supposedly designed it. I would say that this product is sh**, but the dog excrement in my back yard has some intrensic value in so much that it will decompose and become fertilizer. One might even be impressed enough to buy it solely based on that. One gets a warm fuzzy when one sees the product. I have seen a shocking level of failure in the power supplies.
Unfortunately, like so many other pretty packages we see in life, one will likely soon discover the Achilles heel of the product.As someone who has used many LaCie products over the years, and had to troubleshoot them, I implore LaCie to find someone who can design a power supply with which one can be impressed. I have purchased a few, and the company I work for has purchased dozens of them. If you are reading this review, or researching some similar LaCie product, please read the reviews here at Amazon.com as well as do further internet research on LaCie power supply issues.The coolest looking device in the world, with all the bells and whistles to make one feel good about oneself, is relegated to a piece of junk without a properly functioning power supply. This product lacks even that much value.
If I have a locally shared drive on my home network and I'm not using it, I would expect it to be idle. If you are running windows, and have their software installed, it seems to be easy enough to use. It does what it's supposed to do to a point. made this drive kind of sloppy and slow. Ultimately what bugged me the most was how much it was doing on it's own. Otherwise, the web logging (or whatever it was doing), the flashy user interface, and the random login through [.].
The web interface is basically annoying and somewhat sluggish, walking you through folders and files. I have a Linux machine, and the web interface doesn't really work so good, even though it runs on a Linux platform itself. What makes me dislike it, is that to get files on to the drive, you have to use a Java applet, which failed under Linux and didn't work right under Mac either. So at that point, you had to drop in files one at a time, which is unnacceptable considering I had some 10,000 music files to load in. I purchased this drive to have a shared storage device for our computers, and to share media (music and movies) within our house. So sharing is greatly hindered through the web interface that they expect you to use.The other part thing that I find confusing, is that in order to log in through the web page, you have to go to Lacie's website, then log in which portals you back to the drive that is sitting under you desk. This would be fine for logging in from the office, etc., but it's kind of dumb if you're at home and the drive is a few feet away.
I watched it when no one was logged in, and none of our home computers were on. It was constantly sending/receiving info on the internet, and writing some kind of info to the drive - not sure if it was logging info or time or what, it does not automatically update or anything like that. I was able to get my files in there no problem that way through both computers, but again, this would not be easy for someone who did not know how to do it. If you have a Mac, the interface seems to struggle. Last night it was frequently using the internet connection, and you could hear the drive writing, which to me doesn't make any sense.Overall, it's a nice compact drive, great price, large storage capacity, and really seems to be simple enough to operate from a Windows platform.
Gaining access through a network connection, and using a 'backdoor' approach, you can easily drag in piles of folders and files - but this would be confusing to novice users. Once files are stored in the drive, the interface again only allows you to 'download' files back out one at a time, unless you use the same approach. If you're on Mac or Linux, and know how to connect to 'remote' servers on your network, you can add/remove files easily. I'm not overall against it as a storage device, I would just like something a lot simpler from a technical standpoint.
I bought a slew of these to use for backing up large design files. I've experienced a 100% failure rate inside of 2 years, with most of the drives I purchased failing within 6 months. Someone should go to jail for how bad these LaCie drives are. You might as well take a magnet to your data if you buy anything with their name on it, that's how well protected it will be.
They've also sent me THREE replacement power supplies, and have refused to refund my money. I saw them before I bought this, but thought, "Ah, I'm a pretty savvy home computer user and the price can't be beat. Heed the warnings you see from many disappointed consumers. The drive will work for a week, a month, two weeks, but never fails to drop off the network and not return after some time.In their defense, they've been timely and responsive to my support tickets. People are probably just belly aching."Well, it's really not worth the hassle to save a few bucks. I've sent it back to LaCie for repair TWICE, and I continue to have problems with the drive unexpectedly disappearing from the network and not reappearing after many reboots. But I've requested a refund twice and they're still electing to have it repaired.Don't trust your data to this unreliable product. Pony up $200 for something reliable.Brian in Milwaukee
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