http://www.breastcancermail.com

http://www.pcmicrostore.com/





http://www.ipodjuice.com/





http://www.neurostechnology.com/





http://www.snorgtees.com/





http://planetsave.com/





http://www.beyondthepod.com/





http://www.autotap.com/

A little while back, I built a hard drive wiping station out of a few old Pentium II servers. The idea was to securely erase as many hard drives as possible, as quickly as possible. I started out small, and tested various different programs. I tried using Norton GDISK until I realized that it is only an automated version of FDISK. This was not nearly secure enough, because you can easily rebuild a partition table using a tool on the Ultimate Boot CD. So, the next thing I tried was Autoclave. This was a decent wiping utility that could wipe out up to 4 IDE drives. This worked fine until I had SCSI drives I had to wipe. So then I found DBAN which worked perfectly. With this you can wipe out as many drives as you want.

http://www.laptopsforless.com/





http://www.snorgtees.com/





http://www.mwave.com/





http://www.pcuniverse.com/





http://www.thenerds.net/





http://www.shareasale.com/





http://www.snorgtees.com/

DBAN stands for Darik's Boot and Nuke and it is a free Linux boot disk that automatically loads DBAN and gives you some options to wipe the disks. You can wipe SCSI, IDE and SATA drives in any combination. There are several options to wipe the drives, varying from a quick overwrite with random data to a very thorough 25 pass alternating data overwrite with random data. I did a little research and it seems that it is very expensive to recover data once it has been overwritten with random data even once, so I decided that this would be secure enough. You can download a copy of DBAN here.
Some of the computers that I was wiping out had these 90 degree Molex connectors on them. The computers that I was using for the wiping only had 4 Molex connectors on the wires, so I added more. All you have to do is align the wires and pop them in with a screwdriver.
The SCSI cables I was using only had 4 connectors on them, so I could only connect 4 SCSI drives, but with the extra power connectors I could connect another 4 IDE drives.
I put 2 of these computers beside each other to wipe out 8 IDE and 8 SCSI drives at a time.
 
 
Once I could wipe 16 drives in under 10 minutes, I wanted to automate the process a little. I opened up some of the files on the boot disk, and made them automatically load the options I wanted. This eliminated a few keystrokes and made the whole process much less tedious. With a setup like this you could probably wipe out 600 hard drives in a normal work day. Click Here to download the files to automate the whole process.
http://www.voltaicsystems.com/
Home | Guides | Reviews | Downloads | Forum | Links | Banners | Contact
©2002-2008 ModHotSpot.com. All Rights Reserved. No images on these pages may be used without prior written consent.
All information is intended for entertainment purposes only. ModHotSpot.com accepts no responsibility for any damage done
to any device as a result of trying to replicate these projects.