The cheapest per-GB SSD is around $0.50/GB. The cheapest per-GB HDD is around $0.03/GB. We're still off by over an order of magnitude. Shingled recording will add a bit more scaling to HDDs, and as for SSDs, we're already at 19/20nm, and the limit of scaling is... what... 7nm or thereabouts? But more importantly, we're almost at the point where scaling doesn't result in cost reductions per transistor because of the sheer difficulty of the process (e.g., each wafer requiring many more steps).
Exactly.Yeah, I'd like to think that this is what he was talking about...
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.
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.
Because you don't care about it, and/or can't afford to keep it running?the same reason you would leave a vehicle in hot tropical weather.
It's not about making them. It's about getting consumers t pay several times more per GB for them, when the primary benefits are in use cases they won't have. If your music, maps, or dash cam videos disappear, oh well. Just be glad some vermin or bugs didn't make their homes in it, during that time (or, find some did, and deal with that first). Very few people would take that trade, compared to having more storage or cheaper storage. If dealing with aftermarket stuff, though, you can certainly buy suitable SSDs, or SD cards, if you like.just because there are ways around it does not mean there is no point in making them.
Same as anywhere else, just with lower retention time than the same SSDs in Holland.how do ssds work in india or indonesia anyways?
Because you don't care about it, and/or can't afford to keep it running?
Do people in hot climates regularly own cars they only go on vacation with, but leave in their yards, in the heat, off, for most of the year?would think that being able to turn off a vehicle in tropical areas would be a regular operating procedure
Yeah, I'd like to think that this is what he was talking about...