Speaking of hard drives, my brother gave me his old original XBox, and I'm thinking of softmodding it and upgrading its HDD. I did something similar with my Wii a couple years ago (has it been that long?), which now has a USB-powered 500GB Seagate external USB drive.
My Linux box currently has at least 3 drives in it: A 160GB Seagate boot drive, a 160GB drive that is now empty (had WinXP on it, but I moved everything useful off it last night and reformatted to ext4), and a 400GB Hitachi Deskstar/"Deathstar".
The Deathstar is IDE, which would be perfect for the XBox (which has the HDD and DVD-ROM drive as master/slave on a single IDE channel), but I have a bunch of old stuff on it that I want to keep local to that box. Fortunately, I have 2 dodgy 250GB Seagate SATA drives laying around which would probably work for offloading the data if I can get one or both of them going again.
My Windows box has a 300GB WD VelociRaptor and a 2TB WD Caviar green, but they're both getting pretty full and I don't want the Deathstar's data hosted on that machine if I can help it. It's tempting, though, as that box is in a giant Cooler Master Storm Sniper case with tons of drive bays and has an EVGA E657 motherboard with tons of SATA ports.
I should also mention that the pair of 250GB drives were once a striped RAID-0 array, and I'd like to see if I can find out what's on them before I reformat them. I got some software that's supposed to help with that, but a quick attempt to get the drives to be detected by my Windows box's BIOS the other night failed.
I plan to spend my evenings this week trying to push data off of the Deathstar, then mess with the 250GB Seagates this weekend and the XBox the following weekend.
BTW, I hate Seagates now and mostly only buy WD. Those 250GB drives have what look like SMD (surface mount) inductors on the exposed part of their circuit boards, and I accidentally knocked one loose early on while putting it into a drive caddy. It worked after I soldered it back on, but eventually got flaky enough again that I stopped using it.
So Seagates are designed poorly to be fragile. WD drives are better, but even their drives often die on me within a couple weeks of purchase; fortunately WD has a good RMA program 😀