Comments on: Eying solid-state drives, Seagate tries to quell fears
The largest hard-disk drive maker in the world is turning its attention for the first time to solid-state drives. Of course, it faces plenty of competition in the SSD market.
The largest hard-disk drive maker in the world is turning its attention for the first time to solid-state drives. Of course, it faces plenty of competition in the SSD market.
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
Your destination for the latest news on enterprise-level information technology, from chip research and server design to software issues including programming, open source and patents.
Add this feed to your online news reader
Then, I will have a grand total, including my games (which some take up 4GB's or more!) of about 50GB's on my computer or even less. For me, a 320GB solid state is GREAT! Why? No 'you drop it and it damaged' problems (no moving parts!) and they can last a VERY long time.
Traditional Hard drives seem to be increasing by less than 50% every year. I think it was 15+ months between 1TB and 1.5TB drives being released. Flash media, on the other hand, seems to be doubling every 9 to 12 months. 128 GB drives are out now and 256 GB are just a few months away. By the end of 2010, I'd guess that we will be seeing between 1 and 2 TB solid state drives.
Also, don't forget that Solid state drives seem to be increasing in speed nearly as quickly as they are increasing in capacity.
Unless flash memory stops progressing at its current rate, my guess is that within 3 years you will will have a solid state drive along side your platter based drive(s). Within 6 years, solid state drives will have larger capacities and be several times faster.
Also, memory consumption is an issue. If my hard drive spins down, there's no energy being consumed, but the SSD is always using energy.
Even when a mechanical hard drive is spun down, there is still that leech of energy for the chips on the hard drive..... but basically, that will be for ANY hard drive: SSD, mechanical, whatever until the end of time.
Also power consumption? ddannkaert, have you read anything about SSDs and their power consumption? .1mw is not out of the question, and they will only get better as they are chip based. HDDs in desktops always spin, and thus always use power. SSDs are much more power efficient than HDDs.
Typically with HSM, data gets archived to a tiered archival layers, with the first tier based on hard drives. As data age, they get moved to subsequent archival tiers, some of which might then involve tapes (for very long term storage, usually 6+ years due to compliance requirements.)
Not all data need to be archived in long term storage, so in many cases the majority of the the archives sit in the hard drive based tiers before they get permanently deleted.
[CNET editor's note: prohibited material deleted.]
- by George Orwellian October 10, 2008 8:42 PM PDT
- "[CNET editor's note: prohibited material deleted.]"
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(17 Comments)Would you kindly email me as to which TOS item was violated above? I have posted a URL signature at CNet for quite a while now. I am glad to see that HMTL BRs are no longer needed to get line breaks.