When the room is silent, I often hear the hard drive from my laptop working on: is this normal? Should not a laptop be noiseless? Can this indicate that he could break soon?
I'm really not a technical expert. Sorry if the question seems ridiculous to the technicians.
That's completely normal. Only if you have an SSD instead of a hard disk, you will not hear anything anymore. It's much faster, but a bit more expensive per gigabyte. Anyway.
Completely normal. HDDs are mechanical and you can hear that.
Unfortunately, you did not pay attention to an SSD when buying. SSDs are completely silent and around 10x faster than HDDs. And do not break if you knock down the laptop.
The lifetime of SSDs is so long that you can't realistically break them. The manufacturers guarantee a few terabytes. Actual measurements yielded petabytes of written data before the SSDs were broken.
Since HDDs are already problematic, they react to shocks with a head crash, and then it was.
That is true but Ne HDD is mechanical and is too slow haha that is a vicious SAS disks are more of what server in my pc I use a 2TB SAS and a M2 ssd that is the best I find on the market today
M2 SSD is common and certainly not wrong. A SAS disk in a private PC is more expensive overkill without benefit.
And by the way: SAS disks can also be SSDs, SAS is just the connection and the protocol.
I use the pc for work for that is the sas ok I have steam on it but mainly there's my work
That may be true, but nevertheless SAS is useless overkill in a single-user computer. Something is needed in storage servers, but not in individual PCs. It just does not bring any benefits, it just makes the box more expensive.
If it is an HDD, then normal in noise during operation. In an SSD such sounds do not actually occur. If so, then a "power-noise" at the start.