I see. Sorry for the late reply, but does that mean that I should just use wfs-extract for all of my files, or do I use a combination of wfs-extract and the nand extractor app to fully extract every file I need to extract?
Really? Well that sucks because I wanted to use disc2app in order to have a working copy on my SD card in case the worst happens. Oh well, it's not like I'm actually going to be doing this right away anyways-- I'm probably am going to only use redNAND when my regular NAND starts to get corruptedI think you'll have an issue with injecting games into that new wii u, because the wii u uses an indexer. most systems since the ps3 days have used one. think the 360 is the only system in the last 15 years not to use one.
Are you posting to the right person, or are you saying that redNAND just doesn't support indexing, which makes download/load times slower?that's why loading is so slow on the 360 compared with the ps3 when you go to check the contents of the internal drive on the official dash. it reads everything
... you've GOT to be kidding me. Sorry for wasting your time then and I now feel like an idiot for thinking that you could use redNAND as a backup for a corrupted NAND. I'll just continue using the regular sysNAND and just wipe this entire conversation from my memoryif the nand gets corrupted, most likely rednand won't be bootable anyway
Wow, I'm kind of envious now. Thankfully, I don't have enough things to backup in order to justify getting 4 different 20TB hdds just for backups. Since I only have 1 homebrewed console, I only do a a full NAND backup for my Wii U everytime I install new homebrew to it and I save it to my main computer. Having to keep 80TB of pure backup data safe would probably send me over the edge of being paranoid. You have my greatest sympathiesI have eight 10TB hdds, four connected to my computer, four over to the side, with 4 20TB backups between them. it contains backups of all console hdds, sd cards, pertinent files, etc.