Get highly-reliable additional storage on your computer with the Seagate expansion desktop external hard drive. Sporting an enormous 14TB capacity, it offers plenty of space to store all your movies, photos, and other digital files for anytime quick access. Its SuperSpeed USB 3.0 interface allows for transferring large amounts of data in a flash.
Quite true. I guess I’ve been sucked in to the usual way of expressing prices.
One of the problems with the implementation of sales taxes on Canada has always been how vendors are allowed to advertise prices without taxes as long as they include in tiny text something along the lines of ^+tax^.
That should never have been allowed, since its predecessor, the Manufacturers’ Sales Tax, was a Value Added Tax and only got piled on for each successive manufacturing/packaging step, so it wasn’t meant to be visible to the consumer. Even in cases where taxes vary by location, it would be trivial to require factoring the highest possible combination of taxes on adverts just to cover their ass.
Recent batches have Exos 2x14 drives in them. I have three of those. I bought two a couple of years ago that had regular Exos x14’s in them.
And yes, “shucking” means opening them up and separating their valuable contents. That’s how I am using my drives as plain SATA drives in a SAS2 disk shelf.
The Seagate Expansion Desktop case, however, is designed such that the plastic clips holding it together will break easily.
Is Seagate dumping these?
So far so good with my shucking, but these frequent $17/TB sales are suspicious.
It’s better to calculate the cost after tax, that way you get a slightly-more accurate view of the actual cost to you
In my province this works out to about $20.45/tb total
Quite true. I guess I’ve been sucked in to the usual way of expressing prices.
One of the problems with the implementation of sales taxes on Canada has always been how vendors are allowed to advertise prices without taxes as long as they include in tiny text something along the lines of ^+tax^. That should never have been allowed, since its predecessor, the Manufacturers’ Sales Tax, was a Value Added Tax and only got piled on for each successive manufacturing/packaging step, so it wasn’t meant to be visible to the consumer. Even in cases where taxes vary by location, it would be trivial to require factoring the highest possible combination of taxes on adverts just to cover their ass.
They’re an external kit, so what’s in em? Can we crack the shell and use the guts for real/internal disks?
Recent batches have Exos 2x14 drives in them. I have three of those. I bought two a couple of years ago that had regular Exos x14’s in them. And yes, “shucking” means opening them up and separating their valuable contents. That’s how I am using my drives as plain SATA drives in a SAS2 disk shelf. The Seagate Expansion Desktop case, however, is designed such that the plastic clips holding it together will break easily.