• guyrocket@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    I just bought a microcenter brand 1 TB SSD for less than $50. Can a HDD compete with that on price and read/write speed?

    Also recently bought a gaming PC that does not have a HD, only a 1 TB SSD.

    I think HDDs day as boot drives is over. Unless they get a lot faster which I think is unlikely.

    HDDs are certainly useful for larger amounts of storage, though. Self hosting, data centers, etc.

    ETA: I don’t think any of the responses read my entire comment. See the LAST SENTENCE in particular, friends.

    • elscallr@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      My NAS device has 80TB of usable space (6x16TB, raid5). Equivalent would’ve cost tens of thousands of dollars in drives alone.

      Once 16TB SSDs are even available I will probably start migrating them in, but for now mechanical drives it is.

      • Tja@programming.dev
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        9 months ago

        A 4TB SATA SSD is 200 EUR. For 96 TB you would need 24 (probably less for 80TB usable). It would cost between 4k and 4.5k. Prices are going down fast.

      • WalrusDragonOnABike@kbin.social
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        9 months ago

        If you’re able to get enterprise ssds, you could get 16tb ssds… But no clue what minimum order sizes are like for that kind of thing. But of you wanted to use 16tb ssds instead of buying a house 100% down payment, that’s an option probably.

        • elscallr@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          A 16TB, a single one, right now is $1800.

          As I said, as they become available (read: affordable) then I’ll use them. Until that point… mechanical drives have worked well for 50 years and are fine for me. I can accept a margin of problem, it’s the reason I use RAID.

        • elscallr@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          And this isn’t an enterprise thing. It’s my home NAS. For business things I just use AWS like any sensible person.

    • Thrashy@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The last set of NAS drives I bought for my home server were ~$120 for 8TB, and while random access may not quite measure up, I’d put them up against your $50 Inland white-label drive for sustained R/W any day of the week, especially once the SSD’s write cache is saturated. That’s not even comparing like-for-like – consumer hard drives using SMR are quite a bit cheaper than the NAS drives I bought, and enterprise-grade Flash storage costs 2-4 times as much as low-end consumer flash.

      There’s absolutely still a case to be made for mechanical drives in near-line storage, and that’s not likely to change for quite a few years yet.

    • Vash63@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Nobody is buying $50 drives for a datacenter. What matters here is how this compares with 16TB+ sizes.