Mirror is a RAID type, RAID1 specifically.Raid vs Mirror.
Still don't know what you mean by that. As I said, you can have as many as you have spare disks.Can I have more than one mirrors?
If you mean can you have 4 drives running at once, all mirrors of each other, then no, not on the same computer. You can have a mirror on one computer, then have a mirrored computer elsewhere on network, or across the planet.
No, that is not true. With a striped array, RAID0 for example, then the data is spread across multiple drives, so then if one drive fails, you have lost data. But the whole point of mirrored arrays is precisely for when one of the disks in the array fails, and in that event, there will be NO data loss. Saying it *can* is a bit of a cop out - you *can* win the lottery tomorrow too. But saying it probably will lead to data loss is simply wrong for any mirrored array, and there are several types, not just RAID1, that support Mirroring.In "Simple terms" RAID essentially makes a bunch of disks appear as "a unit" so a failure of any one of the disks within the array *can* and probably will lead to data loss.
Mirror is an ability that comes with windows 7. When I say mirror I mean the feature you can commit under Disk Management. AKA http://www.sevenforums.com/hardware-devices/4984-mirror-hd-disk-management.html has a screen capture.
The idea here behind my post was never backup. I was considering the amount of pain and suffering I'd have to undertake with motherboard based hardware raid should my motherboard die or should I decide to upgrade. At such even the only place I may be able to access my data is on the external drive.
I was asking the pros and cons of "software raid" or "mirroring" (as windows likes to call it) versus motherboard based hardware raid.
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