May I point out that if Palimpsest raises false positives, it will cost people 
real money?
About $50 per false warning!

It will cause some people to trash their computers.   It will cause many
people to spend hours trying to diagnose their disks.    Many people
will lose irreplaceable data in the course of responding to these
warnings.

This is an extremely serious bug, if bug it be.

Me?   I chucked out an old disk drive and spent about 5 hours reinstalling 
Ubuntu.   On the *second*, newer computer, I got a bit suspicious.   I found a 
paper by Pinheiro, Weber and Barroso
at Google: http://research.google.com/archive/disk_failures.pdf

The found that "Despite [correlations between failure rates and SMART
data] we conclude that models based on SMART parameters alone are
unlikely to be useful for predicting individual drive failures."

Specifically, from discussions on Redhat's list, it seems that
Palimpsest puts up a warning when one sectors is reallocated, but Google
says "85% of drives survive more than 8 months after their first
reallocation."    And further, they state "Out of all failed drives,
over 56% have no signal on any of the four strong SMART signals...
Actual useful models, which need to have small false-positive error
rates are in fact likely to do much worse than these limits might
suggest."

That says it all.    Palimpsest is a misbegotten piece of software that
means well, but will ultimately hurt people more than it helps.   Sorry,
developers.    Ya gotta do more than write good code: you need to pass a
real statistical cost-benefit analysis, and the inital results suggest
that it's a bad idea.

-- 
gnome-disk-utility nags me too much that my disk is failing
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/412152
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