also there will be no easy way to connect drives into one big storage space in the future
(to operate a single 16TB file you would need 16TB+ of drive space, this means you cant simply use 4TB drives as it is but you need to use RAID to create and array that is at least 16TB and create a 16TB partition
for example 5x 4TB drives on RAID-5 becomes 16TB in total space
also there will be no easy way to connect drives into one big storage space in the future
(to operate a single 16TB file you would need 16TB+ of drive space, this means you cant simply use 4TB drives as it is but you need to use RAID to create and array that is at least 16TB and create a 16TB partition
for example 5x 4TB drives on RAID-5 becomes 16TB in total space
In cloud servers only, you won't be allowed to store personal data.
>build airgapped machine and buy spare parts >hoard dozens of 12tb+ HDDs
simple as
Raiding homes for hard drives? I mean, they would love the idea as it would expand budgets and it's certainly safer than raiding homes for drugs as those people are often armed and have a lot of friends in prison they've been meaning to go visit.
>make a dugout in your local forest or a hideout in some abandoned warehouse >put the computer, HDDs, a bunch of car batteries and a small inverter there. >copy the data on other HDDs and burry them in other location in case the main one gets raided
what now?
2 weeks ago
Anonymous
City demands to demolish said building to make room for whatever else they plan
I will be fricking pissed if we're still doing this HDD/SSD back and forth in ten years. There desperately needs to be a storage hardware revolution. Archiving fricking EVERYTHING should not be an expensive task in the year of our Lord, Anno Domini 2024
>a storage hardware revolution
We are going to die first
Since the DVD days we had sperging about "2tb optical disc", "3tb on a grain of rice", "5tb in dna", and what has come out of it? Nothing. Zero. We had BD and now we're lucky we have the whole awesome total of 3 (THREE) layers that fricking BD (yes, there are 4 but it's considerable more expensive than 3).
Heck, tape has been forever, FOREVER. Have we ever seen a consumer, or at least prosumer, tape drive? I haven't. A fricking tape drive cost a fortune unless you happen to find one in someone's backyard.
Call yourself lucky that you have increasing hdd capacities. The storage world is done for.
>total of 3 (THREE) layers on that fricking BD
*on
And I forgot about the magical 3D laser etched crystal cube or something that would last 5000 years. I remember it was quite meme'd back then.
microsoft's project silica is actually being worked on right now, their oldest video update is from six months ago. the question is whether it'll move out of the corporate sector.
>Where do you think hard drive technolo/g/y will be in 10 years?
More of the same with marginal improvements to continuously part peoples money from their bank accounts. The tech released in 10 years from now technically could have been released 20 years ago.
i got a motherboard that says "nvme m2 port shares bandiwtdh with sata ports 3/4"
so my sata ports 3/4 aren not working. but now since i have 2 ssds (one nvme on sata m.2) and three hard drives all sata and actually all i can connect to my motherboard. sometimes my drives disappear. even in bios. even the nvme disappears sometimes. it's random every reboot. is it realted to power? are ALL my drives dying? is my mobo giving up?
i dunno nuthin bout pc wattage or whatev. parents pay the bills im a neet
Most of the research and development left for greener pastures. I picture it being pretty much the same shit only cheaper and lower quality. Between hoarders, poors, and surveillance systems there will be enough demand for hard drives that fit those use cases, but a lot of the specialty drives will start disappearing.
there will be a ban on selling drives over 4TB directly to consumers 'for their protection'
also there will be no easy way to connect drives into one big storage space in the future
(to operate a single 16TB file you would need 16TB+ of drive space, this means you cant simply use 4TB drives as it is but you need to use RAID to create and array that is at least 16TB and create a 16TB partition
for example 5x 4TB drives on RAID-5 becomes 16TB in total space
>build airgapped machine and buy spare parts
>hoard dozens of 12tb+ HDDs
simple as
Good luck if the government mandates that it is illegal to hoard hard drives.
Raiding homes for hard drives? I mean, they would love the idea as it would expand budgets and it's certainly safer than raiding homes for drugs as those people are often armed and have a lot of friends in prison they've been meaning to go visit.
>make a dugout in your local forest or a hideout in some abandoned warehouse
>put the computer, HDDs, a bunch of car batteries and a small inverter there.
>copy the data on other HDDs and burry them in other location in case the main one gets raided
what now?
City demands to demolish said building to make room for whatever else they plan
Molon labe motherfricker
I can actually see this happening.
But it will be for the environment and it will be for anything x86_64 as well
this stupid enough that I can also see this happening.
in yo mum
10 PB SSDs will be the standard
we finna get 420 homiebytes for $69
In my rig.
I will be fricking pissed if we're still doing this HDD/SSD back and forth in ten years. There desperately needs to be a storage hardware revolution. Archiving fricking EVERYTHING should not be an expensive task in the year of our Lord, Anno Domini 2024
>a storage hardware revolution
We are going to die first
Since the DVD days we had sperging about "2tb optical disc", "3tb on a grain of rice", "5tb in dna", and what has come out of it? Nothing. Zero. We had BD and now we're lucky we have the whole awesome total of 3 (THREE) layers that fricking BD (yes, there are 4 but it's considerable more expensive than 3).
Heck, tape has been forever, FOREVER. Have we ever seen a consumer, or at least prosumer, tape drive? I haven't. A fricking tape drive cost a fortune unless you happen to find one in someone's backyard.
Call yourself lucky that you have increasing hdd capacities. The storage world is done for.
>total of 3 (THREE) layers on that fricking BD
*on
And I forgot about the magical 3D laser etched crystal cube or something that would last 5000 years. I remember it was quite meme'd back then.
microsoft's project silica is actually being worked on right now, their oldest video update is from six months ago. the question is whether it'll move out of the corporate sector.
In cloud servers only, you won't be allowed to store personal data.
>Where do you think hard drive technolo/g/y will be in 10 years?
More of the same with marginal improvements to continuously part peoples money from their bank accounts. The tech released in 10 years from now technically could have been released 20 years ago.
pajeet israelite shingeling where microshit adds ads between each byte among its crash shit bytes
Hopefully dead. HDDs are stupidly slow, huge and inefficient.
i got a motherboard that says "nvme m2 port shares bandiwtdh with sata ports 3/4"
so my sata ports 3/4 aren not working. but now since i have 2 ssds (one nvme on sata m.2) and three hard drives all sata and actually all i can connect to my motherboard. sometimes my drives disappear. even in bios. even the nvme disappears sometimes. it's random every reboot. is it realted to power? are ALL my drives dying? is my mobo giving up?
i dunno nuthin bout pc wattage or whatev. parents pay the bills im a neet
I'd guess you're probably just using more drives than your MB can handle.
Uber quantum AI computer to tell you the time.
>Where do you think hard drive technolo/g/y will be in 10 years?
SATA will be dead
PCI 7 will be around and there will be drives capable of processing 50 GB/s
AAA games will be 500 GB / 1 TB in size.
Most of the research and development left for greener pastures. I picture it being pretty much the same shit only cheaper and lower quality. Between hoarders, poors, and surveillance systems there will be enough demand for hard drives that fit those use cases, but a lot of the specialty drives will start disappearing.
SSDs arent getting any cheaper so HDDs arent going anywhere soon