Western Digital's Crack the Code Contest
Many of you are like me, you have several Western Digital external hard drives. The review linked here doesn't reveal anything new if you already have one, except for this one tidbit, about those distinct grill patterns.
If you know Morse Code -- which only recently acquired the signal pattern for the @ symbol so dear to the digital age, the first addition since World War II -- you may not have to spring for your own My Book drive. (They are highly affordable, however: The 1TB My Book I've been using sells for as little as $330; the 320GB, smallest of the lot, for as little as $165.) Somewhere among the dots and dashes of the My Book family's ventilation grill is hidden a message in that long-short-long telegraphic cypher of yore. If you can find and translate the message you'll be entered in a drawing for a drive. Western Digital is giving away one drive a day until the end of the promotion, on February 12. For details go to crackthewdcode.com.
State of the Art: Hard Sex: Western Digital's My Book desktop drives
If you know Morse Code -- which only recently acquired the signal pattern for the @ symbol so dear to the digital age, the first addition since World War II -- you may not have to spring for your own My Book drive. (They are highly affordable, however: The 1TB My Book I've been using sells for as little as $330; the 320GB, smallest of the lot, for as little as $165.) Somewhere among the dots and dashes of the My Book family's ventilation grill is hidden a message in that long-short-long telegraphic cypher of yore. If you can find and translate the message you'll be entered in a drawing for a drive. Western Digital is giving away one drive a day until the end of the promotion, on February 12. For details go to crackthewdcode.com.
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