📸 Capture, Store, Create – Your Digital Life, Simplified!
The Seagate Backup Plus Slim 1TB External Hard Drive is a sleek and portable storage solution designed for both PC and Mac users. With its USB 3.0 connectivity, it offers fast data transfer speeds and a user-friendly one-click backup feature. Plus, enjoy a complimentary two-month subscription to Adobe Creative Cloud Photography, making it perfect for creatives on the go. Backed by a two-year warranty, this hard drive ensures your files are safe and accessible wherever you are.
Hard Drive | 1 TB Mechanical Hard Disk |
Brand | Seagate |
Series | Segate Backup Plus Slim |
Item model number | STDR1000100 |
Hardware Platform | PC;Mac |
Operating System | External Hard Drive USB 3.0 |
Item Weight | 5.3 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 4.47 x 2.99 x 0.38 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 4.47 x 2.99 x 0.38 inches |
Color | Black |
Flash Memory Size | 1 TB |
Manufacturer | Seagate |
ASIN | B00H4XH5FY |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | December 13, 2013 |
A**N
Looks great, performs well, stays cool.
I purchased two drives, a 2TB in Black and a 2TB in Red. They will each take the place of two desktop bound external 2TB drives that have been dutifully serving as my Media and Time Machine drives that, until bad sector errors have reached critical mass, have performed quite well for a few years. It's fortunate that they should choose to die now, as I'm also moving overseas and would have hated for them to go a month or two from now while I'm over there. Portable was definitely the way to go for me. I don't need 7200 or 10800rpm drives and I don't want to be adapting bulky wall warts overseas, either.Now, there's a bunch of options out there from Toshiba, Western Digital, Seagate and many other lesser-known brands for external, portable drives in the 2TB range. I've been mainly a Seagate customer for the past 5 years or so because they've proven to me that their products have a long life and perform well. This was for desktop models only, however, and design never played a part because they are all, pretty much, big and clunky boxes that sit and do nothing. A portable drive is a different story, and I think Seagate has outdone itself with this drive.Design. Before I bought the two Seagate models, I had bought a WD My Passport 2TB drive at Staples. It was alright, but it was very thick. Nearly twice the thickness of my MacBook Air at the hinge end. The chassis was metal surrounded in plastic and it looked alright. It certainly wasn't going to vie with the MacBook Air for looks and I think it suffered because it tries. The performance was fine, just what I'd expect from a portable USB 3.0 drive. The real problem with the design, though, was not the thickness but the shape. There was virtually no flat surface on the drive at all. Every edge was tapered and the flat surfaces had some convexing going on. Mine would rock side to side on a desk and wouldn't stay in position in my lap. I looked on Amazon for alternatives and found this. I'm happy to report that, with the sides leading to the bottom are tapered, the bottom of these drives are flat and are made of a nicely textured plastic that feels good and grips well on a desk or a leg. The top is even better, being a piece of aluminium that is completely flat and very good looking. Despite the colour scheme not being derived from Apple, the slimness and choice of materials certainly make this feel as though it belongs in a bag with my MacBook or on my desk next to my Magic Trackpad. It's the best looking external drive I've seen. The light on it, however, feels distinctly Apple. Overall, the design is excellent and, without going to the lengths of moulding a piece of metal over a bare drive (see the Seagate Seven), this is probably as slim as you can expect these drives to get. It's nice to see products that design around the user and still manage to keep it looking good rather than just make it pretty.Performance and Heat. As said, these replace my other drives that serve other purposes and that are just about full. So, first order of business was to copy over the old Media and backups to the new drives. First, I formatted them for Mac. For those who don't know, you can buy just about any drive and use it for Mac, even if it says Windows or PC. This can save you a lot of money. Just open Disk Utility, click the drive, select Format and click Mac OS Extended (Journaled) or whatever filesystem you'd like to use. After that, I just dragged and dropped. From a USB 3.0 drive to another USB 3.0 drive with my Retina MBP, two terabytes copied in a little over five hours. This puts the total transfer speed around 100MB/s. Pretty damn fast. While the files were transferring, I made sure to keep an eye on the heat coming from the Seagate Slims (well, I kept the back of my hand on it) and was pleased to report that neither the metal top nor the plastic bottom got any hotter than my MacBook Air runs on my lap. That is to say, they didn't get hot at all, merely warm, and I don't think there's a hazard here.Packaging. Who cares? Its a cardboard box around a plastic shell. The tape holding the box shut was annoying like the tape on new DVDs and Blurays that never comes off in one pull, no matter how much you use your nail to free it. Included is the drive, a fact sheet and a USB cable. Who needs more?This is a great buy. At (if I remember what should be the numerator and what the denominator) $0.05/GB this isn't the best you can do for 2TB, but it's really close. I'm happy with the performance, the design is stellar and user-centric and I suspect the lifetime of this product will be far longer than the time it will take me to fill these drives and need bigger ones.
P**R
Seagate 2TB Slim Red - Doing What I Wanted
My "Seagate 2TB Slim Red", as I renamed it, came a day early well packaged & pretty in red. Its 18" USB 3.0 cable fits tightly on both ends. This Dell Inspiron i5 3542, Win 8.1, immediately put a "Safely Remove..." icon on the Taskbar & chirped. I DO use that icon when I want to disconnect it, although I see, in Device Manager, Windows set it for "quick removal". And I leave it set that way. (Aready I've rebooted & let the laptop sleep forgetting to use that icon with no detectable ill effects - but no writing was going on that I know of.)Quick Removal: Disables write caching, but supposedly no need to use icon.Better Performance: Enables write caching, but must use the icon.(Dell Diagnostics says... Cache Size: >= 32.0 MB.)I ran Dell's performance tests: smart status, 2 smart thresholds tests, targeted read, random seek, funnel seek, 2 linear read tests - & it passed each. The optional SMART Extended Self Test ran for 6+ hours, & it passed. I'm extremely pleased the drive got only midling warm (it has no vent holes) & never clinked or clanked the whole time. I could only hear it spinning by getting close. And I lifted & tilted & held it an hour+ during the tests, but never turned it upside down. (Now/then I felt a tiny kick in there; hence, the cesarians some here have performed on theirs. But I'll let mine come to term on its own!) Left plugged in for 10+ hours today - but little/no activity - it isn't even midling warm, though the 2.5" disk is spinning.Pursuant to my main reason for getting the drive, I did a MS System Image Backup. It offered to backup the EFI System partition, C:, & WINRETOOLS to "Seagate 2TB Slim Red" & took just a tad over 7 minutes to do it. I see the WindowsImageBackup folder that was created is 28.5 GB huge & the drive's used space increased accordingly. I did reboot to System Image Recovery & was pleased to see the 2TB Slim listed as a recovery drive with the image shown by date for selection.So, I must say I'm very pleased through four days of ownership. Definitely, I will update this review should anything go wrong. But I fully expect I'm invincible now...(1) Dell recovery image partition (to factory install)(2) MS Recovery USB Flash drive(Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Recovery - Create a recovery drive)This is necessary to boot without engaging partitions you intend to overwritewith the Current System Image during a restore. This also has a copy of myDell factory image for refresh/reset purposes.(3) Current System Image on my Seagate 2TB Slim Red(Control Panel\System and Security\File History - System Image Backup)So, I'm all signed up to get the Win 10 upgrade! -UPDATE 8/8/15: All continues to work well with my Seagate 2TB Slim RED. In addition to two for Win 8.1, it now holds two full system backups for Win 10. Back in July, I gave it a brother: Seagate 2TB Slim Blue. It too worked well out of the box, w/o installing the Seagate software. I put a clone of Win 8.1 onto it, before taking the upgrade to Win 10. Before that, I did run...PS C:\Windows\system32> chkdsk E: /RThe type of the file system is NTFS.Volume label is Seagate 2TB Slim Blue.Stage 1: Examining basic file system structure ...256 file records processed.File verification completed.0 large file records processed.0 bad file records processed.Stage 2: Examining file name linkage ...282 index entries processed.Index verification completed.0 unindexed files scanned.0 unindexed files recovered.Stage 3: Examining security descriptors ...Security descriptor verification completed.13 data files processed.Stage 4: Looking for bad clusters in user file data ...240 files processed.File data verification completed.Stage 5: Looking for bad, free clusters ...488318496 free clusters processed.Free space verification is complete.Windows has scanned the file system and found no problems.No further action is required.1953513559 KB total disk space.113728 KB in 7 files.20 KB in 15 indexes.0 KB in bad sectors.125823 KB in use by the system.65536 KB occupied by the log file.1953273988 KB available on disk.4096 bytes in each allocation unit.488378389 total allocation units on disk.488318497 allocation units available on disk.PS C:\Windows\system32> exitSo, I remain overjoyed with Seagate.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago