Micron just demoed the world's fastest SSD with PCIe 6.x tech, a sequential read speed of 27GB/s, and yes, it's just a prototype for now
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I just want bigger drives... I feel like we've been stuck at 1TB for at least a decade.
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I just want bigger drives... I feel like we've been stuck at 1TB for at least a decade.
You can get spinning rust all the way up to 32 TB in a single 3.5" disk and 8 TB in an NVMe drive. The tech is out there, but it takes time for the price of stuff like that to come down when there isnt much demand for it.
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When do we start needing active coolers for our drives?
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I just want bigger drives... I feel like we've been stuck at 1TB for at least a decade.
What are you talking about?
My laptop SSD is 2tb and I got it 3 years ago.
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You can get spinning rust all the way up to 32 TB in a single 3.5" disk and 8 TB in an NVMe drive. The tech is out there, but it takes time for the price of stuff like that to come down when there isnt much demand for it.
I refuse to believe there isn't much demand for it when we have MicroSD cards approaching 2TB.
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What are you talking about?
My laptop SSD is 2tb and I got it 3 years ago.
One step above what I had back in 2012? What exactly does that say about progress in capacity?
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I refuse to believe there isn't much demand for it when we have MicroSD cards approaching 2TB.
I do think the demand decreased in the past decade. The average consumer has their photos and documents in the cloud and signs up to streaming services for movies, shows, and music.
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When do we start needing active coolers for our drives?
Enterprise NVMe drives have some active cooling, but it's mostly due to high density
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One step above what I had back in 2012? What exactly does that say about progress in capacity?
It's twice the amount you were complaining about, and there are bigger drives than the one I have.
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I do think the demand decreased in the past decade. The average consumer has their photos and documents in the cloud and signs up to streaming services for movies, shows, and music.
fair point, even the MicroSD market would target the mobile user and not so much a desktop.
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You can get spinning rust all the way up to 32 TB in a single 3.5" disk and 8 TB in an NVMe drive. The tech is out there, but it takes time for the price of stuff like that to come down when there isnt much demand for it.
There's lots of demand for large drives, it's mostly for enterprise drives though.
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I just want bigger drives... I feel like we've been stuck at 1TB for at least a decade.
Yeah, my 2013 black 1TB cost like 100β¬ so 12 years ago, prices are going down but not really falling off a cliff lol.
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It wasn't that long ago when RAM had similar transfer speeds.
With PCIe 6, consumer grade SSDs shouldn't need more than a single lane. That will be nice since AMD and Intel have been pretty skimpy with the PCIe lanes lately.
What about latency though?
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When do we start needing active coolers for our drives?
i have a samsung 2.5" ssd and it actually would benefit from active cooling. when i installed my os, downloaded my steam games, and then made a copy of one (because steam insists on updating which breaks mods) and noticed that write speed was slow af...so i tested with kdiskmark and all speeds were exactly at 75mb/s while they should be at like 550. it throttled to keep temperature under 60c.
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fair point, even the MicroSD market would target the mobile user and not so much a desktop.
Mostly the photography market as far as I know, those raw images take up a lot of space.
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What about latency though?
The latency of RAM has been around 10ns for the last couple decades. The latency of a good NVMe SSD is about 1000 times worse than RAM.
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I just want bigger drives... I feel like we've been stuck at 1TB for at least a decade.
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I do think the demand decreased in the past decade. The average consumer has their photos and documents in the cloud and signs up to streaming services for movies, shows, and music.
But on the opposite end games are only getting bigger and fast internet is still semi expensive so having large drives would be beneficial to people that want to keep multiple games installed on their PC/console.
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I have never once been about to tell a real world difference in SSD speeds. Until OS I/O code improves, faster SSDs don't excite me.