I'm guessing this may be more a software question than hardware but i'm happy to be corrected.
As i get larger drives, the smaller ones are going to be pretty useless to me. Sure i'm not going to get any retirement money off them but i also probably wont use them either so they'd just end up in the bin, which is a bit of a waste especially when someone may have use for them.
They'll have had sensitive data on at one point or another such as banking details. It's highly likely that i could just remove everything off the drives, sell them and nothing would happen but i'd prefer to not take any chances.
So on that note, how do you totally erase a hard drive so that there's no (or minimal) risk of anyone using a program to see what had been stored on the drive?
It certainly is a waste of time clicking it if you're not interested in Windows 11's development. If that were the case for you, you could easily ignore the headline and move on given the headline makes it clear that's what the article is about. Instead, you're contradicting yourself here calling it a waste of time yet clicking on the headline and commenting...
If it were a totally different topic being presented than what's stated in the headline, then you'd certainly have a point, 'cause that's totally deceptive and unavoidable if not actually interested. However here, you can totally avoid it if you're truly not interested.
No, it did not work. I did not read the article. I saw the title in my Feedly feed and came to continue putting pressure about such titles on a website I used to love.
In fact, based on your reply, it seems you think it's fine to visit click bait title articles to find out what it's about, to waste people's time. That's up to you, mate. I remember when news websites had pride in their content and therefore didn't need to resort to cheap tactics.
I think they will try and benchmark base it at £100 as being the premium product and then have extras on top.
The issue will be who can play it and who will pay for a every more expensive late stage console now
Question
Technique
I'm guessing this may be more a software question than hardware but i'm happy to be corrected.
As i get larger drives, the smaller ones are going to be pretty useless to me. Sure i'm not going to get any retirement money off them but i also probably wont use them either so they'd just end up in the bin, which is a bit of a waste especially when someone may have use for them.
They'll have had sensitive data on at one point or another such as banking details. It's highly likely that i could just remove everything off the drives, sell them and nothing would happen but i'd prefer to not take any chances.
So on that note, how do you totally erase a hard drive so that there's no (or minimal) risk of anyone using a program to see what had been stored on the drive?
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