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Getting rid of a hard drive
At my workplace we generally just run Darik's Boot & Nuke. But I admit that the "shredder" is very cool. And there's a certain appeal to putting in a small shooting gallery back behind the Help Desk.
http://lifehacker.com/5154818/hard-d...reme-prejudice |
Cool. I hate trying to destroy them. I mannually have removed three from desk tops and then took them apart and tried to cut them, burn them, bend them back and forth til they broke, all without success, and eventually just threw them in the trash. It would take a lot of work to physically put them back in order to read unless you were really determined. But I am sure it could be done.
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DBAN works wonders. It's the best utility for this out there that's available to the general public.
If you really want to cause damage, take them apart and grind the platters with sandpaper. |
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metal grinder, added to list. |
Drop them from a very tall building? Most platters won't stand more than a few g's.
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.44 mag
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Like I said, the belt sander works best :). They can recover data from hard drives from laptops from crashed airplanes.
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1/4 inch diamond carbide drill bits.
Holes spaced 1/2 inch apart. Or: Thermite. Or: Drill one hole, fill with sulphuric acid CAREFULLY!!! Or: A ball mill, if you have access to one. Or: Place hard drive on wood block, balanced on edge. Use MONSTER MAUL™. |
Why not just melt it?
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Thermite will melt it.
or you can file off the bearing it works the best from what I have seen. |
make them into wind chimes
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Use a torx t10 bit to open the outer case.
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Shred it, baby!!1 |
And then they will dump the scrap and the lead and heavy metals in the circuit boards will leach into our groundwater. :(
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