Laptop battery recently died, and I’m planning a new PC build anyway, so I’m wondering: can I just remove the HDD from my laptop and connect it to the motherboard? Would I need any extra parts or hardware? I’m guessing no, but it’s hard to research on my phone. Any guidance is appreciated :) thanks!

  • @Vinny_93
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    -38 months ago

    Wait - people still use HDDs?

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
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      58 months ago

      I use rotational hard drives to store backups and to store video. Rotational drives aren’t very good at fast random access, but I don’t really need that for those tasks.

    • sylver_dragon
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      38 months ago

      They’re big and cheap. My “server” (desktop with delusions of grandeur) has an array of 3 2TB drives (Western Digital WD2003FZEX) running in a ZFS pool. I run Nextcloud and sync all my photos, videos and documents to it. I don’t need high speed storage, just a lot of it. Back when I built it (maybe 8-9 years ago) those drives were a reasonable price for that much storage. If I were to re-build it again today, I’d still pick spinning rust over solid state drives. I can get 8TB drives for ~$180. For the same price, I’d get far less space on a solid state drive and the extra speed wouldn’t be useful.

      Buying the newest tech isn’t always the right choice. You should pick parts which fit the use case.

      • @Vinny_93
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        18 months ago

        I have a server with 40TB of HDD storage. But my home pc only has SSDs, preferably NVMe.