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#1
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there are lots of great new storage devices out there but I'm not buying anymore storage myself... Just wondering how long everyone here thinks it will take for all the spinning disks in all the computers on the planet to become obsolete in lieu of solid state? Just think... less space, less heat, less energy use, no need for lasers to burn disks, faster transfer rates, no noise, no fans, no liquid cooling. In fact, maybe there will be no need for personal storage at all. Maybe Everything gets stored centrally at Google and manipulated by us using Google's fibre optic lines that they have been buying up over the past years. Then Google will have control of everything. All the information changing hands, all the media, even full feature movies, all stored online with Google as the gate keeper. Sobering thought. ![]() Already been a few years since Ive personally stored email on our machines. .. and will it happen before Dec 21 2012 - that is the question. Maybe we should start an online pool ![]() M/ |
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#2
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When you can have Exabytes of data stored in a permanent, non-perishable format in something that takes much less space, is faster to access etc. When solid state will be cheaper and replace all moving part hard drives in datacenters...
__________________ MacBook Pro | Dell Mini Inspiron 9 | Mac Mini | Newton 2000 | iPhone | @Work : Dell D620 & 2x20" + a lot of Macs | Workstation, VC & Fusion Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. ~ Samuel Clemens | Rants | Photos |
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#3
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__________________ Mac mini 2.0GHz 10.6.1 • 4GB • 320GB • Superdrive • 4 x 1TB USB 2.0 • LED Cinema Display MacBook 2.0GHz Core 2 Duo - White 10.6.1 • 4GB • 250GB • CD-RW/DVD-ROM iPhone 3G 8GB • iPod Touch 8GB • iPod Photo 60GB • iPod nano 1GB • AT&T U-Verse 18Mb/2Mb http://www.jeffhoppe.com |
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#4
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| I wouldn't hold my breath. It hasn't been a few years; it has been more like a few decades. SSDs have been around for about 30 years. Over the next 30 years, I expect them to make remarkable progress.
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#5
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I dont know what to do with the 50 or so tapes I have left in the basement. its the same show as on dvd but no one will take them even at a few cents on the dollar. :~( |
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#6
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Look at the porn industry -- still happily collecting money off of VHS productions/sales!
__________________ Mac mini 2.0GHz 10.6.1 • 4GB • 320GB • Superdrive • 4 x 1TB USB 2.0 • LED Cinema Display MacBook 2.0GHz Core 2 Duo - White 10.6.1 • 4GB • 250GB • CD-RW/DVD-ROM iPhone 3G 8GB • iPod Touch 8GB • iPod Photo 60GB • iPod nano 1GB • AT&T U-Verse 18Mb/2Mb http://www.jeffhoppe.com |
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#7
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As for the limited writes, I think this is basically a non-issue now. The number of writes has increased a lot over the years (it's in the millions now), and with the storage size ever increasing, you can go a loooong time without overwriting any one part that many times (intelligent file systems try to wear out flash drives evenly). There was an article about this a while back (I think this is the one: http://www.storagesearch.com/ssdmyths-endurance.html ) that concluded that with even wear leveling, it would take over 50 years of constant writing at max speed to wear out a 64GB flash drive. That would increase proportionally as storage size increases and write endurance increases. Obviously that's not a real-world scenario; in the real world there would be large parts of your disk that would very rarely change, so the wear on the rest of the disk would be higher. But even so, keeping lots of space free at all times is normal these days (and recommended in OS X even with HDs). I think I can safely expect to die long before I wear out the writes on modern flash media. |
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#8
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Or at least you'd live long enough that the files would be moved from the average 128 GB SSD to a 10 TB SSD in a couple of years, long before the original SSD dies its death.
__________________ iMac 24" 2.4 GHz, 4 GB RAM, 320 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.6.1 MacBook Air 13" 1.6 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.6.1 Mac mini 1.83 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.6.1 MacBook nano (Lenovo S10e white) 1.6 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 250 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.7 iPhone 3GS 32 GB white. Mac user since 1987, Apple Sales Professional 2009, Apple Product Professional 2007-2009, Apple Certified Support Professional 10.5, Apple Certified Pro Aperture 2 (Level 1) |
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