How long do you think it will be until 50TB hard drives become the norm?
How long do you think it will be until 50TB hard drives become the norm?
Probably never. A 128 GB SSD is all you need today unless you play games.
I program play games do media production. I need 1tb
Never. All the R&D is going into SSDs now. When SSD's reach price parity with HDDs (~5 years) expect to never see an HDD again
By "hard drives" I meant spinning disks AND SSDs. "Hard drive" is a generic term for the computers main storage, whatever it is.
You have cloud storage and streaming of media. Why would you need a lot of local storage space?
Because you don't want to support restrictive DRM and other anti-user practices, nor rely on a third-party service for data storage.
I'm not sure how long it will be until normal data would reach sizes that big.
My mom has been saving pictures from everything for the last 20 years on her computer, something like 4000+ images and they still all fit on a 500gb hdd with plenty of room to spare
Her 5000-ish item music collection on itunes also fits on the same hard drive
And that only takes up 60gb because of all the stupid podcasts
Even today, for a regular consumer, most can work with under 250gb of space
Now if large storage drives get cheap, maybe uncompressed music will get popular, maybe her future phone will do 8k images and maybe she'll start buying and downloading high resolution movies and tv shows
But even then in the states video is currently in she wouldn't need more than 1tb more.
Well the flash makers are sick of price wars and would rather have profits, so they're not spending billions of dollars to drive down the cost per gigabyte of flash. The spinning-disk makers are no longer raking in the money from billions of consumer-market sales, now their market is enterprise and datacenter, because most consumers don't buy 10TB drives. So there's much less cost-cutting pressure on them.
My prediction is that you'll see consumer-sized SSDs (like, 128-512GB) stay around their current prices and everything else slowly gets more expensive per unit space.
Okay so no reason other than autism?
>unless you play games
Or work with big data. Or work with virtual machines... or really just have a lot of large documents in general. I still have a 10 GB CSV on my hard drive that's just training data for my old computational linguistics class.
Who is this smol smug sexy semen sweetheart?
What "norm"? Industrial norm?
50TB is on the small side for a typical 30 min. 3D animation project
Explain
Tomorrow !
For an average small screen 3D cartoon, usually 1 minute= 1TB (and even that depends on a particular scene). The size of a 30 minute long episode (actually about 20-22 minutes, minus montages and commercial slot) is between 25 to 40 TB
It will always be nice to have a HDD for that beautiful mechanical sound. Expect there to be cultists like the mechanical keyboard fags that will use it because of the "experience."
>Thinking you have to be autistic to want a local back-up of your data
>128 GB SSD is all you need
what did you say to me you lil shiiilll?
ITT, normies who own a "cheap" 256GB ssd and think hdd 5TB for tyhe same price is a waste a time, while at the same time having to go thru hoops to ensure not much background data is being written on their SSDs daily.
damn user, when is all that data written? when you start the 3D rendering that then takes a few hours to render frame by frame at 4k, and then reencode it in h264 and h265 for review?
so a NAS with several cheap 3TB ~5TB works just fine?
Ten years for mechanical hard disk drives. For solid state drives fifty years. Current tech has poor outlook for SSD capacity.
We're still not doing 4K since most channel is still stuck at 1080i.
Actually in my section we only use a single 4 TB HDD because we're only doing background animation. Afaik on other section that is responsible for actual animation, they used a bunch of CCTV-grade HDD and do a RAID
Decade or two.
>50TB hard drive
one big power surge and 50TB of data vanishes in a sec. yeah, won't be buying one of those.