![]() ![]() If you want to secure a system very quickly, the My Book probably isn’t the hardware that you need. To make this situation more palatable a backup application that focuses only on files that have changed is required, and the WD Backup tool offers that feature.īut what it won’t do is a live dynamic backup, securing only on an hourly or daily basis. If you have an extensive system to backup to the My Book this would invariably be an out of hours exercise, since small files would reduce the transfer speed further. It's quicker than the equivalent Seagate external drives, but neither is quick. ![]() That’s about a half of what you might expect from a SATA SSD externally connected via USB 3.0, and about a fifth of the best NVMe SSD external drives connected via USB 3.2 Gen 2 ports. We ran several synthetic tests on the My Book 8TB connected to a USB 3.0 port (USB 3.2 Gen 1), and they all pointed towards a plateau at around 190MB/s for reading and 180MB/s for writes. Here’s how the My Book 8TB performed in our suite of benchmark tests:ĬrystalDiskMark: 189MBps (read) 179MBps (write)Ītto: 193MBps (read, 256mb) 191MBps (write, 256mb)ĪS SSD: 182MBps (seq read) 178MBps (seq write) And, we’d only recommend that action if the drive were outside warranty, and you suspected that the USB board or PSU had died, and not the physical drive.Īnd, if you’ve used the hardware encryption option, extracting the drive might not get your data back anyway. For those curious, getting the physical drive out of the enclosure probably involves destroying the case. Inside the shiny black case is a WD Red, and 8TB in the review model, and the electronics to enable this SATA mechanism to be interfaced to USB. This version doesn’t even have a power on/off switch, so the drive becomes active the moment it is connected.Īlongside the USB Type-B Micro connection on the back, and the barrel power socket, the only other external feature of note is a Kensington lock slot, enabling the My Book to be physically secured. Setting up the drive is remarkably simple it’s a matter of attaching the provided power pack and the USB cable to the computer. Once static charged by the removal of the protection, dust is attracted to the My Book like wasps to a family picnic. ![]() That said, the designers love of shiny black plastic that comes with clear plastic to be peeled off isn’t without its issues. And, the two-tone wavy/flat styling still looks good on this latest version. When Western Digital stopped trying to make the My Book series look like actual books, it heralded a vast improvement in aesthetics. We found the 8TB review model could be bought for as little as £167.42 in the UK and $149.99 in the US. Our research reveals that online retailers offer substantially better value. “Prices provided by Western Digital are manufacturer suggested retail prices only and are set according to local market conditions (including tax and exchange rates) and the local competitive landscape” When we asked Western Digital about these discrepancies and received this reply, When converted for the exchange rate those prices seem excessively high compared to the USA pricing of $89.99 (3TB), $109.99 (4TB), $134.99 (6TB), $159.99 (8TB), $209.99 (10TB), $249.99 (12TB) and $279.99 (14TB).Īnd, in the UK the best value per TB is the 6TB and 14TB models, where stateside the 8TB and 14TB hold those honours. Interesting device from a name that most techie folks know – Promise.Where in the USA you can purchase a 3TB model, elsewhere the start point for this range is 4TB, with 6TB, 8TB, 10TB, 12TB and 14TB options. I didn’t see anything on the website about security or encryption.Īs for iOS it appears you have to do everything thought their iOS app so it’s really not integrated into your iOS device like using Apple’s iCloud services.Īnd it only has 90 days of technical support which could leave you wanting for help – I’m guessing there’s lots of technical stuff you need to know to use it. This means that Promise knows where and what your device is doing. Unnicely however you have to create an account and register it with Promise so it can direct your device to the Apollo. Nicely however it can function as a Time Machine for macOS so it has a nice dual function. ![]() No one would configure a backup device using RAID 0 so you really are going to have 4 TB. You might want to edit the link url to the specific location of the product on the website: Ī bit of marketing snow – although the device has 2 4TB drives you have to decide how you want to configure them. ![]()
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