10 Questions You Should to Know about Military Grade

18 Apr.,2024

 

You will get efficient and thoughtful service from Mclassic Metal.

Staff members and applicants speak to the realities of a day at MEPS and what you can really expect from the entire process.

Transcription

Walking through the MEPs doors making the decision to enlist is a huge life-changing opportunity and decision we recognize that and so we want to be there to greet you and guide you and make you feel comfortable by answering any questions you have. 

There's not much that's unexpected from MEPS. When you get here everything's explained to you they tell you exactly what to do exactly where to go. 

Most kids have a misconception that it's going to be all yelling and screaming and it's going to be nothing but pain and heartache but in actuality it's more like a day at the doctor's.

An applicant can and sometimes does unfortunately fail the initial medical examination. 

As liaison we're here to navigate that path for applicants. There are waivers in place that we can grant based on you as an individual and your character and the circumstances. 

The testing is not just your overall score that we look at. So taking your test scores and what you want to do we kind of find the best job that fits you if you have no idea what you want to do. We deal with that all the time too because we go through every job you're qualified for and what sounds interesting to you.

You just go do the ASVAB test and based on your score you get a job. 

There's a lot that we are doing to support you but in the end I hope you feel confident and that you feel you're going to be successful because that's what us as liaison want for you as well.

I recently sold my 128GB Crucial M4 SSD (I have a much larger capacity OCZ SSD, which is faster), and need to wipe the drive.

I know that the 'toughest' wipe that can be done is a 35 zero-write military-grade 'nuke', which essentially wipes the data on the drive 35 times over.

I wouldn't normally bother with this secure-erase, but the drive contained classified high-security software files of my own creation, and I really do not want anybody else to gain access to the information. There's rumors that just a single format will do it, but I've tested this and my drive-recovery software was able to find the files after the SSD was formatted.

No, I'm not going to destroy the actual SSD, since that'll be a waste of money, and the fact that I've already sold it for a fairly handsome price.

My question is, can a 35 zero-write wipe harm an SSD? I will continue researching on how to wipe my data completely (I know that formatting just recreates the partition table, and doesn't remove the actual files), but I'm curious whether the 35 zero-write will harm an SSD in any way.

10 Questions You Should to Know about Military Grade

Can a Military-Grade wipe harm an SSD?

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