• Jo Miran
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    5 hours ago

    Reminder that the reason that GOG is DRM-free and offers offline installers is because it was started by former pirates (in a sense).

    If there is a game you love, buy it from GOG and archive the offline installer. If it isn’t available on GOG, pirate it. The number of games that have disappeared is too damn high.

    • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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      4 hours ago

      I need to get a couple more external drives and make at least one Faraday cage to keep one in.

      All my installers are on a 1tb hdd that sits in my dresser. Made it a lot easier to put my games on my new laptop since they were installed before I even got to hooking it up to the internet.

      • JPAKx4@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 hours ago

        Beware of bit rot, hard drives are meant to be powered occasionally to hold data. Using a recycled computer as a NAS is a great low cost solution.

        • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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          39 minutes ago

          powered occasionally to hold data

          A bit more detail: simply being powered on won’t necessarily stop that.

          You want something checksumming the data and making sure it’s not silently rotting off the disk.

          ZFS does this, something like snapraid can do it too, and there’s various other methods of making checksums you can validate data integrity with and be able to repair minor corruption. (PAR files, for example.)

          A real-world example of this kind of oops is everyone’s favorite Youtube Tech Personality™ LTT who lost a fuck-ton of data due to not scrubbing data on a ZFS array and had to go through months of restoration to get most of it back, so uh, yeah, make sure you’ve taken steps to detect and correct the bitrot that’s going to happen anyways.