Hi all,
I just saw an article online (which I'll link to below), concerning a new high capacity SSD that is about to be launched.
And it got me thinking. About 1989, I bought a Seagate 20 Mb MFM hard drive and thought that was very capacious (having to that time booted into DOS via a 5 1/4 floppy drive).
Soon after that, I got another Seagate drive, this time a 40 Mb. But that was it as MFM only supported 2 hard drives. In the early 1990's I then switched to SCSI drives and got a Quantum 270 Mb drive and an Adaptec AHA1542 adapter. More SCSI drives followed, mostly more Quantums and I soon had a small array of 540 Mb drives (though NOT connected in RAID, as I couldn't afford a RAID adapter !!)
Over the next few years, I upgraded, bit by bit and, like most people with PC's we're now talking Gb drives, for not a lot of money. And recently I got a 5 Tb "spinning rust" external drive (as an "archive" device) for about 30 cups of Costa coffee...
But it seems that's not enough....and Seagate will soon be making available: a 60 Tb SSD...
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/08/09 ... _60tb_ssd/
Of course the problem is that to backup such a drive using my 1.2 Mb floppy drive is going to take simply AGES !!!
**UPDATE**
It seems Toshiba have just trumped Seagate, by announcing plans for a 100 Tb SSD
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/08/10 ... b_qlc_ssd/
regards
Tim
wow
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Re: wow
Quite impressive when you think that at the beginning of 1997, the entire internet was only 2 Terabytes.
However:
However:
Better not update your files too often"... QLC drives would have a 150 write cycle endurance rating ..."
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Re: wow
Hi MarkWoodles wrote:Quite impressive when you think that at the beginning of 1997, the entire internet was only 2 Terabytes.
However:
Better not update your files too often"... QLC drives would have a 150 write cycle endurance rating ..."
Yup - you spotted the "elephant in the room" as it were...as far as Write capability.
I think these would be fine as WORM drives which will make life a lot easier/cheaper etc for data centres, where read access is only required...so websites like Youtube, Vevo, Spotify, etc would love these...as well as big corporations who want to provide fixed datasets to employees/clients/suppliers etc.
And once the basics are sorted no doubt the pricing will come down and the write cycle capability will improve.
regards
Tim