Backing Up Drum Samples
To most music producers and beat makers, one of the highest-value collections of sounds on our computers is the drum samples we adore. Having built hundreds and maybe thousands of drum samples - and storing many more - it is no wonder that many would simply not know what to do if the hard drive that stores these samples crashed. A lot of the songs we make often do not save drum samples and other external sounds along with the project, so it can be hard, if not impossible, to ever recover such sounds from the jaws of a crashed hard drive.
If you plan to store all of your music, samples and documents on your computer hard drive and nowhere else, you'll be in for a lot of trouble some time down the track. Computer vendors have advertised the five-year lifetime rate (mean rate, not average rate) for hard drives as a push to consumers: you should back up sooner rather than later. Don't keep putting it off. In any case, you should not store everything just on this drive, especially if it's your main one, too.
If financial difficulties or other reasoning prevents you from going beyond your main hard drive, you will need to look after a few different maintenance pivots. One of these is the defrag process. In short, it moves files that are similar to the same spot on the hard drive, allowing it to search and seek less when going for the same things over and over. This will increase the life of your hard drive. In fact, it will maximize it.
Flash USB drives are another option, but one that most music producers would advise against. Why? Well, they're very easy to lose track of. You could drop it into a gutter or anywhere else, so if you really need to use it for backup purposes or to store everything, connect it to your key-ring for maximum security. You can get them cheap these days, for just a few dollars, but long-term performance is not great.
CDs and DVDs - the rewritable kind - are great as a backup solution for most people that don't have huge amounts of ever-changing data on their computers, but are not ideal at being the sole location for your drum samples or other data. The reason why is that programs will not write to them on the fly.
A second hard drive is great both as a backup solution and to store your main drum samples and music projects. You can have everything in two places at once, and for performance reasons, it makes sense anyway. Having all of your Operating System files on one hard drive and your music samples on your other hard drive allows the PC to read and write from the first hard drive freely, while the second is busy with just music-related transfers and files. - 18418
If you plan to store all of your music, samples and documents on your computer hard drive and nowhere else, you'll be in for a lot of trouble some time down the track. Computer vendors have advertised the five-year lifetime rate (mean rate, not average rate) for hard drives as a push to consumers: you should back up sooner rather than later. Don't keep putting it off. In any case, you should not store everything just on this drive, especially if it's your main one, too.
If financial difficulties or other reasoning prevents you from going beyond your main hard drive, you will need to look after a few different maintenance pivots. One of these is the defrag process. In short, it moves files that are similar to the same spot on the hard drive, allowing it to search and seek less when going for the same things over and over. This will increase the life of your hard drive. In fact, it will maximize it.
Flash USB drives are another option, but one that most music producers would advise against. Why? Well, they're very easy to lose track of. You could drop it into a gutter or anywhere else, so if you really need to use it for backup purposes or to store everything, connect it to your key-ring for maximum security. You can get them cheap these days, for just a few dollars, but long-term performance is not great.
CDs and DVDs - the rewritable kind - are great as a backup solution for most people that don't have huge amounts of ever-changing data on their computers, but are not ideal at being the sole location for your drum samples or other data. The reason why is that programs will not write to them on the fly.
A second hard drive is great both as a backup solution and to store your main drum samples and music projects. You can have everything in two places at once, and for performance reasons, it makes sense anyway. Having all of your Operating System files on one hard drive and your music samples on your other hard drive allows the PC to read and write from the first hard drive freely, while the second is busy with just music-related transfers and files. - 18418
About the Author:
Stop procrastinating, and make rap beats now. Right now. You see, making rap beats isn't exactly hard, so there are no excuses.



