how to make use of 500 gigs on my new laptop

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  1. Posts : 1,800
    Windows 7 Pro x64 SP1
       #11

    strollin said:
    This reminds me of when I went from a PC with 2 360K floppies to a 20M hard drive, I thought there was no way I could ever fill that much disk space. Don't worry, it will fill up soon enough without you looking for ways to do it.
    I thought that 160K floppies (2 of them) would be more than enough.

    Some people save everything and need the Terrabyte drives. That is until they have a hard disk crash and can't remember what they backed up.

    I thought that I would never fill up my 10Megabyte drive.

    Seriously, you can still buy 10gig hard disks. Now with the SSD's running up to the 540Gig range. the fixed or winchester disks will be getting cheaper..

    Just enjoy the space..

    Rich
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 483
    Windows 8 64 bit PRO
       #12

    Lol, I have a friend just like you, however i am at the opposite. I have about 3 HDD. One for Windows OS, Stuff , and last 1TB for backups.

    I am low on space I think I have less than 200GB's left. It's a real shame, Because I am also running out of SATA ports on my motherboard for new HDD or drives.

    I think pretty soon I may need to upgrade the entire system. If your biggest files are mp3 files (avg 10MB for high quality mp3s), you will probably never fill it up. Videos, Games, Backups are pretty much the fastest way to fill up your HDD.

    However you shouldn't aim and make this a goal. Think of it like cars, with fuel. Where having a full tank, represents and empty drive with a lot of room. It's a day when you ran out of fuel, it will be the same when your computer HDD is full.

    @ Side note
    I have DVR, Netflix, Hulu, however i still enjoy my videos or TV shows on my computer.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 4,751
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32-Bit - Build 7600 SP1
       #13

    pparks1 said:
    ibshaw said:
    500Gb by nowadays standards is a good amount of space but, believe me, once you start downloading films especially in HD etc it can get used up quickly
    I swear I must be the last person on the planet left that doesn't downloading movies or TV onto a computer.
    I don't download movies either. I used to download music from Napster when it was free. Are the movies the same type of thing that Napster used to be where it is a pier to pier thing with no regulation and a great chance of getting a virus?
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 29
    Win 7 Home premium 64 bit
    Thread Starter
       #14

    thanks for the response. Looks like 500 gigs will be more than enough for me. My main thing is my 32GB music collection. Plan to copy over some dvds using handbrake. Will just keep going with it and hopefully it will start to fill up soon enough.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 3,371
    W10 Pro desktop, W11 laptop, W11 Pro tablet (all 64-bit)
       #15

    clark33 said:
    thanks for the response. Looks like 500 gigs will be more than enough for me. My main thing is my 32GB music collection. Plan to copy over some dvds using handbrake. Will just keep going with it and hopefully it will start to fill up soon enough.
    Be careful of what you wish for!
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 1,346
    Windows 7 Professional x64
       #16

    AddRAM said:
    richnrockville said:
    Welcome Clark33 to the windows 7 forums.

    In todays disk sizes, 500gigs is about the smallest hard disk you can buy.

    I would not worry about all that space, you will figure out that the free space goes down as you install new programs and get more pictures and music.

    Just enjoy all the space and don't worry about wasting space.

    Rich
    You must not get out much.

    But seriously, If you start loading up your pc with a bunch of downloaded junk, your gonna slow it down and you`ll be back here asking for help about something. Just use your computer and enjoy it. One thing I would do is, create a 60 or 100 Gig partition to store disk images on.
    Imaging is excellent advice: As a standard practice it is better to do a disk image to a separate drive, because a disk failure would render the image useless.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 138
    MS Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit SP1
       #17

    clark33 said:
    Hi there,

    Im new to this forum and know enough about computers to get me by. 500 GB seems like a lot of HD space to me. My music collection only takes up 32GB and my pics only half a gig. Im not much of a gamer so woudnt really use it for that. Im wondering if I can get any tips as to how to fill up my 500Gigs, as it seems like a real waste that im not using this space with different bits and pieces.
    Don't worry about it , be happy.

    There is no waste.

    Also, there are benefits of having an uncluttered computer:

    Your antivirus programs will complete their task in a fast fashion because there is less stuff to analyze.

    Same thing with Ccleaner and other erazing tools.

    The use of an external Hard drive is a better option anyway, because you can keep your files safe, and separate from your PC , and they have got about 1000 gig for a small one. And they are not expensive.

    Good Luck.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 100
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
       #18

    Sir George said:
    AddRAM said:
    richnrockville said:
    Welcome Clark33 to the windows 7 forums.

    In todays disk sizes, 500gigs is about the smallest hard disk you can buy.

    I would not worry about all that space, you will figure out that the free space goes down as you install new programs and get more pictures and music.

    Just enjoy all the space and don't worry about wasting space.

    Rich
    You must not get out much.

    But seriously, If you start loading up your pc with a bunch of downloaded junk, your gonna slow it down and you`ll be back here asking for help about something. Just use your computer and enjoy it. One thing I would do is, create a 60 or 100 Gig partition to store disk images on.
    Imaging is excellent advice: As a standard practice it is better to do a disk image to a separate drive, because a disk failure would render the image useless.
    Yes, I do that as a matter of routine.

    My C: drive only has the OS and installed progs/apps/games.

    My files are all on other drives.

    I re-image about once a month, or whenever I make changes to C:
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 4,751
    Windows 7 Home Premium 32-Bit - Build 7600 SP1
       #19

    Katanyavich said:
    Yes, I do that as a matter of routine.

    My C: drive only has the OS and installed progs/apps/games.

    My files are all on other drives.

    I re-image about once a month, or whenever I make changes to C:
    You should reimage more often. I do mine once a week and some on here do it more often than that. If you have to restore your image, you want one that is up to date, not a month old.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 100
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
       #20

    Once a month was a ball-park figure.

    On occasions, I've done several in a space of days when making major changes.

    But I certainly never leave it LONGER than a month to make one.
      My Computer


 
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