master_shake_
Diamond Member
- May 22, 2012
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A 1:1 copy Bluray rip is ~25GB alone, and that's only going increase when we get 4K content.
That's a bit ridiculous. If you wanted some arbitrary metric that has at least a bit of validity in order to limit storage capacities, it'd be to not buy any 2.5" disks with more than a single platter and not to buy any 3.5" disks with more than 3 platters. 4+ platter 3.5" disks typically have higher failure rates, but aren't very common anyway partly because of that. As platter density goes up, so does maximum throughput. Also, as platter density goes up, when short stroking you can hit IOPs targets without reducing as much capacity. Give me single platter 1TB 2.5" 7200RPM SATA disks all day, you put enough of those in a box it'll be mighty speedy.
If your friend is concerned about reliability what are his thoughts on SSDs? NAND flash has limitations that HDDs simply don't, but just like everything in technology it's a trade-off. You get higher performance for a limited lifespan. I don't see how this is a concern, when in almost every environment you might have a 5 year cycle at most (even at home, shorter if you're reasonably tech savvy).
I do.
There is, depending on the filesystem, although updating the "access" (unlike "created" and "modified") timestamp is nice to turn off for performance.I guess there's a way to search for "last date since file access <= 1 year" or something?
But I guess it's another question as to whether you are actually *using* that storage.
Maybe it would be more interesting to see how much data a person has "touched" in the last year. This would probably exclude much of a large stored collection. I guess there's a way to search for "last date since file access <= 1 year" or something?
If digital hoarders was a show I would be on it. Easier to buy another HDD than to find what is expendable in my pr0n stash.
"Fill up 4TB of data" you mean?
In exchanges with some "senior" friends who are "mainstreamers," somebody mentioned Jack Valenti in a more favorable context of Hollywood movers and shakers. And I countered by noting "Jack Valenti will ultimately be remembered for the plague of HDCP and the copyright Nazi movement!" My friends quickly responded by saying "You don't need to record broadcasts anymore; you can just purchase the movie online, it's "yours forever" and play it anytime you want."
But I watch Tee-VEE! I can't watch two channels at once, even with two monitors and two input sources. I "DVR". And I confess -- it's a sort of "short term" collection. I can't play or copy the recordings on any other computer than the one which recorded them -- at least not the encrypted premium channels -- thanks in part to Jack Valenti. So I make periodic purges, keeping both the freebies and the premiums I'm likely to view again before purging. In this practice, my storage requirements may not expand significantly. Without the HDCP restrictions, they would expand more, but I wouldn't be out on the sidewalk downtown trying to hawk pirated copies, either. The last time I "shared" a movie by passing a friend a DVD, it was the PBS "INdependent Lens" production of "Chicago 10." OTA and PBS is pretty much meant to be free as far as I know, even though PBS offers DVDs for a price.
So if I want any 3TB drives, I'm gonna take my darn time -- there's no hurry. And if someone says "I need a 12 TB storage array!" -- who am I to judge or decide?
You do not want to push the capacities of SSDs (slows performance down) and HDDs (ditto, the fastest-to-access portion on spinning disks gets taken first, so you never want to be anywhere near full on a HDD). As a rule of thumb, if you are 75% full, it's time to get more capacity. OP might not be there yet, but he will be eventually.
I think newer games in the not so distant future are going to have ultra high textures made for 4K monitor resolutions. I bet those sort of games could easily eat 50gb to 100gb+ and more. Rage ate 20gb and Max Payne ate 30gb and they're only going to get larger. Within circa 5 years I wouldn't be surprised if there were a PC game that ate up 200gb of storage space.