I purchased it approximately four years ago so that I could use it to store working files. This means that the disk is used constantly, and it is able to withstand writing, reading, deleting, and additional recording. Immediate formatting with NTFS ensured that both computers and televisions were able to read all of the data without any issues. A few days ago, I started having technical difficulties, and then I wrote that I had been refused access, and then I attempted to commit hara-kiri, which resulted in the computer no longer recognizing him. The other computer was able to see it, but it reported a problem with the recycle bin. The results of the virus scan were negative. After a few days of trying different things while dancing with tambourines (the terabyte is almost completely full, and I really didn't want to lose so much information), the hostess finally forced me to register with access to all folders, and after that, everything started functioning normally again. It is not entirely clear what it was, but I think it might be prudent to get an additional external hard disk as a failsafe.
18 TB External HDD Western Digital WD Elements Desktop, USB 3.0, black
95 Review
2 TB External HDD Western Digital WD Elements Portable (WDBU), USB 3.0, black
84 Review
8TB Seagate Backup Plus Hub Desktop Hard Drive with Data Recovery Services
56 Review
Game console Microsoft Xbox One X 1000 GB HDD, black
53 Review
SAMSUNG T7 Touch Portable SSD π½ 2TB: High-speed, Secure & Compact Solid State Drive!
17 Review
πΎ SanDisk 2TB Extreme PRO Portable SSD - Ultra-Fast Speeds up to 2000MB/s - USB-C, USB 3.2 Gen 2x2 - High-Performance External Solid State Drive - SDSSDE81-2T00-G25
10 Review
π StarTech.com 3.5in Silver Aluminum USB 3.0 External SATA III SSD / HDD Enclosure with UASP - Portable USB 3 3.5" SATA Hard Drive Housing (S3510SMU33)
10 Review
Seagate BarraCuda 500GB Internal Hard Drive HDD - Reliable, High-Speed Storage Solution for Desktop PC - SATA 6 Gb/s, 7200 RPM, 32MB Cache (ST500DM009)
11 Review