Hard drives are non-directional. angle or direction makes no difference at all.
I don't know, the "needle" in there and the disks might not like the "gravitation" being upside down or something. I was always super scared to moved a spinning disk while its working
The fiip side is...when HDs fail, they often give warning by acting or sounding funny. This sometimes gives users some time to retrieve data and swap out before failure, just like in the OP's experience. SSDs typically fail catastrophically with no chance of data recovery.
If HD starts to give noises, is it still reliable to retrieve data from? I always imagined the hardware malfunctioned and whatever data you retrieve might be "corrupted"
For any body following along, most Mac syncing and backup apps use the old Unix tool rsync as the actual engine, and the dev adds a user-friendly GUI so we don't all have to be CLI warriors. Last time I checked, CCC and SuperDuper, along with literally dozens of other tools were built on rsync.
rsync gui? where? i heard there was an attempt but it unreliable and bad.
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is there a software that I can use encrypted cloud storage like proton drive and Filen as a destination for backup? unencrypted ones like OneDrive and Gdrive has many but not the encrypted ones.