I recommend a laptop because you can put a DVD burner in them. I think DVD storage is the best option at this point. If one doesn't have a DVD burner or doesn't want to burn DVDs for whatever reason, then a laptop *AND* an external USB drive are a pretty good system.
rather than 1000 on a good laptop, why not 80 gig worth of memory cards, much safer than a laptop..
It's not. If you carry two portable USB drives, you're no better or worse. But I still prefer DVDs, which are vastly cheaper.
I can get 2 100gig portable drives for 200-250, how can a laptp and dvds be vastly cheaper?
I don't believe that you had mentioned using two duplicate hard drives. If you did, then I apologize. But trusting one's entire collection of trip photos to one single hard drive, especially a laptop one, is very dangerous.
COLOR="Red"]in this thread and severaal others where this topic has come up I've mentioned having 2 portable drives and a back up 2.5 hard drive that i could drop into either one if needed..[[/COLOR]
Again, I would not expect a photographer to be a hard drive expert any more than I would expect a network administrator to tell me how to set up umbrellas for a fashion shoot.
a single photographer no of course not, but PPA basing their decision on thousands of working pros, who are traveling the world, outdoors, wildlife etc...using the drives hard, I would trust them
Much as they think they are, college students are NOT the center of the universe.

The business world uses laptops far more than college students do.
I don't know when youwere last ona college campus, but there are a lot more laptops there than in the average business environment... Most businesses and most adult laptop owners don't leave their laptops on...
But that's all a moot point as that's not a valid reason IMHO. I don't know where you read that but it makes no sense.
I clearly stated that I read that on a message board full of repair techs, nothing personal, but given the choice of believing a large group of repair techs, or one disboards member, I'd put my money on the numbers.. Again, maximum temperature is reached quickly and and the hard drives are designed to run at that temperature... and anyway, on any modern OS with default settings, the laptop's hard drive is powered down when the laptop is left unattended for a while.
I'm not a computer expert, but this was mentioned and they claimed it's a misconception, that the drive constantly cyles on and off..
I've done systems administration professionally for over ten years, not a single user I've supported leaves their laptops on 24/7, yet I've seen countless hard drive failures. Most recently, Dell Latitude C640 hard drives were dropping like flies. Over the three-year-lease, probably 15-20% of them had failed hard drives. That's a pretty big percentage.
were they hard drive failures, I know from talking to the people in my computer dept, that dell has a serious problem with motherboard failure, from using under sized resistors, they are aware of the problem but won't correct it..
I believe that Seagate offers 5-year on all hard drives they sell, no exceptions. As for Western Digital - it, along with nearly every other manufacturer, went from the usual 3-year warranty to a 1-year warranty several years ago. They then began offering three-year warranties on the OEM (and later retail, IIRC) "Special Edition" drives (with larger, 8-meg caches), and many other manufacturers began following suit, making larger-cache premium drives with longer warranties. Unfortunately, I believe that all of them, except Seagate, have gone back to one-year warranties on all drives (excepting enterprise-class SCSI drives.) I can't find any indication that Western Digital will give you anything more than a one-year warranty on any consumer-grade IDE/SATA hard drive, unfortunately.