Quote from: asl97 on April 24, 2023, 08:11:15I am definitely NOT trolling. Also have a functional mainboard-memory-video card with an AMD 80286 12-S processor. No math coprocessor installed in the mainboard, sadly. I don't have a huge museum of antiques, but these are pieces of hardware that I own and I am not trolling.Quote from: LOL on April 23, 2023, 16:52:03Mechanical HDDs will eventually be obsolete and only available at some museum display.maybe in a few tens or hundreds of years, HDD hasn't reach it's peak yet, the heads of a HDD all move together right now and only one of them is active at a time and that greatly limit the speed.
for a large HDD with multiple platter, there still room for improvementQuote from: NikoB on April 23, 2023, 17:35:49after 3 years the reading speed drops by 3-10 times, even with wear in 1%.If your wear is only at 1%, you clearly didn't give it a chance to refresh the cell much, ether resilver the drive or better yet, copy everything off it, do a secure erase to refresh the drive and copy everything back.
The same thing slow down happens with flash/thumb drive, the only difference is you do a full reformat, basically filling it with '0'sQuote from: Codrut Nistor on April 23, 2023, 18:04:33I hear you! Still have two FUNCTIONAL 50 MB Conner drives somewhere around. Do you happen to know a billionaire who would pay me at least 100k for them? :D
You are clearly just trolling now
Quote from: asl97 on April 24, 2023, 08:11:15If your wear is only at 1%, you clearly didn't give it a chance to refresh the cell much, ether resilver the drive or better yet, copy everything off it, do a secure erase to refresh the drive and copy everything back.if you need to store data for several years on a shelf with rare backups, no "updating" of cells is possible and no one in their right mind will deal with this nonsense. Adequate people will simply buy a capacious HDD, which is also many times cheaper, without helium, and close the topic of storing their data for 10-15 years in advance, having copies on 3-4 disks at the same time. Plus, it is desirable to have the most valuable ones on BD, but in light of their low capacity (single-layer ones, because multi-layer ones are extremely unreliable according to tests), no one wants to mess with them until the capacity of BD discs grows to at least 1TB. Tapes are also inaccessible to ordinary people, due to the huge cost of read / write systems for them. Only the rich and business can afford them.
Quote from: LOL on April 23, 2023, 16:52:03Mechanical HDDs will eventually be obsolete and only available at some museum display.maybe in a few tens or hundreds of years, HDD hasn't reach it's peak yet, the heads of a HDD all move together right now and only one of them is active at a time and that greatly limit the speed.
Quote from: NikoB on April 23, 2023, 17:35:49after 3 years the reading speed drops by 3-10 times, even with wear in 1%.If your wear is only at 1%, you clearly didn't give it a chance to refresh the cell much, ether resilver the drive or better yet, copy everything off it, do a secure erase to refresh the drive and copy everything back.
Quote from: Codrut Nistor on April 23, 2023, 18:04:33I hear you! Still have two FUNCTIONAL 50 MB Conner drives somewhere around. Do you happen to know a billionaire who would pay me at least 100k for them? :D
Quote from: LOL on April 23, 2023, 16:52:03You heard this here first: Seagate will get sanctioned due to various illegal dealings with China.I hear you! Still have two FUNCTIONAL 50 MB Conner drives somewhere around. Do you happen to know a billionaire who would pay me at least 100k for them? :D
Not like it matters much, Seagate and Western Digital will become irrelevant as SSDs eat up their market share. I am old enough to remember floppy diskettes and Iomega Zip drives. Mechanical HDDs will eventually be obsolete and only available at some museum display.
Quote from: LOL on April 23, 2023, 16:52:03You heard this here first: Seagate will get sanctioned due to various illegal dealings with China.They will never become obsolete for a simple reason - 3D TLC, and even more so QLC and even more terrible PLC, store data for no more than 2-3 years at the initial speed, and after 3 years the reading speed drops by 3-10 times, even with wear in 1%. Which is proven even by my personal multiple tests from different manufacturers. And the lower the flash grade, the worse it gets. How many people in the world buy A++ grade discs? 1-2%?
Not like it matters much, Seagate and Western Digital will become irrelevant as SSDs eat up their market share. I am old enough to remember floppy diskettes and Iomega Zip drives. Mechanical HDDs will eventually be obsolete and only available at some museum display.
Quote from: The Werewolf on April 21, 2023, 18:57:59Sorry, but a cheap unreliable hard drive isn't a bargain.The only DOA drive I ever got was a WD. An Enterprise drive, to make the matters worse. Also, I had one WD die all of a sudden, a few months after its warranty expired. This doesn't make me say that WD is a bad brand, only that I had been unlucky with WD drives.
With one exception, all the drives I've owned that have failed catastrophically have been Seagates. I've had one WD drive fail ever and it was a SAFE fail (onboard diagnostics warn of an impending failure) so I had lots of time to get my data off the drive.
I've even bought Seagates that were DOA and had to get the seller to replace them. Again, never happens with WDs.
I have 20 HDs online and 15 offline for backups running for over 10 years, for context.