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  • Grebuloner - Thursday, October 19, 2023 - link

    Only 256MB cache on a drive that large while 512MB is already in the wild?

    And it's time to up the TB/year rating. All the drives seem to max out at that figure. (~9PB is a 100% writes per year total)
    Reply
  • PeachNCream - Thursday, October 19, 2023 - link

    Don't forget that main memory is more than adequate as a cache for mechanical drives and the underlying technologies have improved significantly over the years as DRAMless SSDs have demanded using system RAM to prop up performance. Reply
  • wrosecrans - Thursday, October 19, 2023 - link

    20+ years later, Ultra SCSI 320 is still more than fast enough for any one mechanical hard drive. Yeah yeah, I know it was always meant for multi disk arrays on a shared bus and not just a single drive. But still, it would have shocked us 25 years ago to see how much some technologies have stagnated. It's amazing hard drives are still relevant despite all the growing pains they've had with a Million x capacity growth. It really feels like we may be finally close to the end of the line with cheap flash only being ~2x the price of expensive rust. Once they hit price parity, it's pretty much over for rust going in circles. Reply
  • nandnandnand - Thursday, October 19, 2023 - link

    NAND is great when you want to be able to shake it and not have a head crash. Not so great for cold storage with QLC taking over and PLC waiting in the wings. Reply
  • Threska - Thursday, October 19, 2023 - link

    Maybe FeFET memory will be the solution.

    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.2...
    Reply
  • The Von Matrices - Thursday, October 19, 2023 - link

    HDDs always seem to be one step ahead of flash in terms of capacity per price, and they will continue to be. If HAMR disks actually do come out, then hard drive capacities will double to 48TB within the next year or two for only a modest increase in price, and they will continue to be the go-to method for cheap storage.

    As far as transfer rate, that's just a consequence of geometry. Data density increases in three dimensions (radial density, angular density, number of platters) but transfer rate only scales with one dimension (angular density) so drives will always get slower and slower relative to their capacity over time.
    Reply
  • PeachNCream - Thursday, October 19, 2023 - link

    This is why we need to being back the Quantum Bigfoot 5.25 inch hard drive! May as well use all those empty ROM drive bays in old cases that still have them for storing your huge collection of ... Linux ISOs. Reply
  • Bob Todd - Friday, October 20, 2023 - link

    I can buy a new X16 16TB Exos CMR drive from B&H right now for $300. Please show me where I can buy a 16TB SSD for $600. People always post this "spinning rust is almost dead, flash is only 2x the price" garbage but it's never true. Reply
  • meacupla - Friday, October 20, 2023 - link

    best I can find is 2TB for $80ish and 4TB for $200ish Reply
  • Small Bison - Friday, October 20, 2023 - link

    The Samsung 8 TB 870 QVO is $350 on Newegg right now. Or you could get four 4 TB QLC drives from Team Group for $560. No one's packaged that into a single 16 TB drive, but they could in theory. Reply
  • James5mith - Friday, October 20, 2023 - link

    Do me a favor and test this one out: Take a 4TB SSD and write it full of data. Archive it for a year. Try and read it back.

    HDDs are excellent for long term archival purposes. NAND requires periodic refreshes to avoid data loss.
    Reply

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