Soundmanred
Lifer
What about the rare earth elements that go into HDDs, both in the heads and the platters. That stuff is "rare", so eventually it will increase the price of HDDs, or perhaps they won't even be able to be made anymore.
Uhh...no.
What about the rare earth elements that go into HDDs, both in the heads and the platters. That stuff is "rare", so eventually it will increase the price of HDDs, or perhaps they won't even be able to be made anymore.
Depends on temperature and wear. IMFT offers MLC rated by them for up to 5 years at ~70F (or, at least, they did though 25nm, and projected the same for the future). JEDEC spec is 1 year. Those times are based on being at the p/e rating.
So, yes, but the temperature sensitivity is what mainly sets them apart from HDDs. Intel is the only one I know of that's shown research data from testing at different temps, and at temps that a drive might find itself in your car on a hot day, they were down to just weeks.
I was also quite ignorant of that not long ago, as there seemed to be somewhat of an urban mythology surrounding it for USB thumb drives.
Depends on temperature and wear. IMFT offers MLC rated by them for up to 5 years at ~70F (or, at least, they did though 25nm, and projected the same for the future). JEDEC spec is 1 year. Those times are based on being at the p/e rating. So, yes, but the temperature sensitivity is what mainly sets them apart from HDDs. Intel is the only one I know of that's shown research data from testing at different temps, and at temps that a drive might find itself in your car on a hot day, they were down to just weeks. I was also quite ignorant of that not long ago, as there seemed to be somewhat of an urban mythology surrounding it for USB thumb drives.
It has nothing to do with the computerization of anything, but specifically NAND intended for the consumer electronics markets. Other markets have different requirements, and products to suit them exist, though not at the same low prices.not going to work with the computerization of everything
Why? If you leave your SSD in a non-climate-controlled storage unit, or car, or desert hut, for several months, having hammered it to anywhere close to its rated endurance, and expect everything to be peachy, the problem is not the SSD. If stored in a climate-controlled environment, all will be fine. It's probably not the best treatment for a well-used HDD, either.they need to rate those at least to 130F
There will always be hard drives.
Need to think outside the box. There certainly will NOT always be hard drives.
Why? If you leave your SSD in a non-climate-controlled storage unit, or car, or desert hut, for several months, having hammered it to anywhere close to its rated endurance, and expect everything to be peachy, the problem is not the SSD. If stored in a climate-controlled environment, all will be fine. It's probably not the best treatment for a well-used HDD, either.
HDDs, just like cars have been coming with since they included storage in them?then what are you going to use for storage for electronics in vehicles in the tropical areas?
HDDs, just like cars have been coming with since they included storage in them?
Off-road vehicles will have something aftermarket, which will be whatever you want, or whatever some device you use supports. But, again, why is it the storage devices fault that you leave it out there in such environments, powered off, and then expect it to be OK? It's not the SATA SSD's fault, or SD card's fault, or USB thumb drive's fault, if you leave offline backups in a vehicle exposed to the elements.what about vibration prone vehicles like off road buggies
+1 to that. SSD's will improve, become cheaper and will leave HD's i n the dust.
There will always be hard drives. They're far easier and cheaper to make for the capacity they provide. Yes, we're hitting a wall with respect to magnetic density, but that's true for semiconductors, too--and as cell sizes shrink, there will be more negative pressure on things like longevity and data retention. There is little reason to expect SSDs to ever be competitive with HDDs in terms of price-per-bit. I do expect SSDs to take over "primary" storage--OS, apps, etc. But not extended storage.
Already in the budget sector, this scenario isn't so far out - the cheapest SSDs are approaching the cheapest HDDs in price/memory, at least in the retail market.
The one thing I've wondered about SSDs with regards to capacity, is what's stopping manufacturers from creating SSDs in 3.5in or even 5.25in form factors, and actually utilizing that extra space for more memory cells?
No doubt that mechanical hard drives will be obsolete at some point, I think the gist of the original question is when?
When quantum hard drives are affordable...