![]() |
||
|
|
Welcome to the Exploding Garrmondo Weiner Interactive Swiss Army Penis. |
GFF is a community of gaming and music enthusiasts. We have a team of dedicated moderators, constant member-organized activities, and plenty of custom features, including our unique journal system. If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ or our GFWiki. You will have to register before you can post. Membership is completely free (and gets rid of the pesky advertisement unit underneath this message).
|
![]() |
|
Thread Tools |
What's the best way to transfer about 30 Gigs of music to another computer?
I have all of my music on the computer that I'm currently on right now and I need to know the best music to transfer my music to another computer over a relatives house. What would be the best way to do this?
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
The best thing to do would be to take your hard drive to the other house and plug it on slave.
If you can't move, that would be by FTP. what else... There's nowhere I can't reach. ![]() ---------------{ Currently playing }-- ... Nothing.... really. -----------------------{ Last rips }-- Trauma Center New Blood (Wii) Trauma Center Second Opinion (Wii) Planet Puzzle League (DS) ---{ Currently in ripping progress }-- Dragoneer's Aria (PSP) Professor Layton and the Curious Village (DS) -----------{ Other stuffs about me }-- My VGM Collection (last update: mar. 03, 2008) -------------------------------------- |
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Agreed that the most ideal way is physically connecting both HDs into one machine. If you have to do it over a LAN, pick some sort of server and use it. I'm a fan of SSH/scp myself, but that's mostly limited to the *NIX world. FTP would work fine.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
Scholeski |
If you have or can get a hold of a HD enclosure off a friend you can use that so you don't have to open up a relatives computer as it plugs into the USB slot at the back of the PC.
Of course if you don't/aren't computer savy enough to want to open up your PC and remove the hardive, can't use the ftp method, and don't want to take the PC over to their house, you can also burn the music files as data on to DVD discs, especially dual layerd disc's (if supported) can hold quite a bit of data. But plugging it in and configuring it as slave would be the easiest method as cubed suggested. I was speaking idiomatically.
Last edited by El Ray Fernando; Apr 28, 2006 at 06:15 PM.
|
I also recommend the crossover cable and an FTP server, though What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
FELIPE NO Mario Kart DS: 498293-921939____ Star Fox Command: 155-576-696-451____ Metroid Prime Hunters: 4854-1233-4943____ Final Fantasy III: 506891214495____ Xfire: freuser____ Steam: Free.User____ |
What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
Kaiten, (A) you can run an FTP server on a LAN just fine, (B) You'd need a crossover cable rather than a regular CAT5 unless you have a router, and (C) he was discussing options for if they couldn't get the computers in the same building together.
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
Wandering Sage |
Aye, grab a crossover cable, plug it into each computer, and switch the IPs around a bit to help them see each other. That's the easiest method, I say, and it's still extremely speedy. I find that really deep directory strucutres slow it down, but sheer size doesn't. I transferred about that much in movies in under 30 minutes.
There's nowhere I can't reach.
So. . . err. . . how bout them Mets?!
|
Most amazing jew boots |
USB external hard disk. Quick and easy, and no silly fiddling around with masters and slaves.
![]() I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |