[citation][nom]deksman[/nom]Simply speaking: the prices of SSD's are still way too high, which is one of the reasons people aren't picking them up in mass quantities (this is for the non-tech savvy population), and in regards to those who do know a thing about computers and SSD's, they also know that the technology is not 100% reliable just yet.On top of that, manufacturing costs of SSD's are minimal for companies such as Intel, etc. (they always have been), and yet they are gauging the prices of this storage tech for years now.The storage ratio vs the price tag is absurd.HDD's are effectively at 4 TB, and SSD's are barely approaching 1TB (and cost well over what you would buy a regular computer for).You're gonna tell me that NAND tech is incapable of matching/surpassing HDD's in terms of storage?Don't make me laugh.[/citation]
if you can tell me the size of an single ssd chip silicon, i can do the math and tell you about how much they are screwing us, i cant find the info anywhere, so basing it off an new not priced to sell ssd, they get 21tb per wafer and it costs 50k to make a wafer about.
by my math, 2tb would cost you close to 5000$, i know that number is way off, so anyone, if you tell my the die size, ill get a better figure.
[citation][nom]A Bad Day[/nom]There are two ways to boost SSD sales:A: Information advertising blitz. Lots of people still don't understand the importance of data speed and only look at the price per gigabyte.B: Drop the SSD prices.[/citation]
than there are people like me, who dont care about load times, what they would focus on... but my hdd got accessed to the point that it was .7mbps on a 120mbps drive.
i got an ssd (xmass present, so not yet) to off load all of the random crap that loads from os and other programs that slows the crap out of the hdd.
[citation][nom]lradunovic77[/nom]I have this Conspiracy theory that prices for regular HDD will never go down again in order to push SSD sale to people. Just saying...[/citation]
yea, because most of the harddrive makers don't make ssds, at least to my knowledge, or at least don't make them en mass. like they would ever want the ssds to be pushed over spinning disc.
[citation][nom]iLLz[/nom]Increase production, and I mean go all in with it like CPUs. That will drive cost down dramatically so u can lower prices dramatically. Everyone wins, mechanical HDD go away.[/citation]
yea, except 21tb per wafer and 50k per wafer. want the price to go down, decrease the nm, and find a way to reduce wafer base cost. no amount of mass production will reduce the bace cost right now, mass production only brings cpu cost down because r&d is spread out over a crap ton of chips, ssds im assuming don't have much r&d.
[citation][nom]livebriand[/nom]Gee... if the prices are high, of course people won't buy! Unless SSDs come down to about 50 cents/GB, I won't buy. Besides, I find my PC boots fast enough (windows 7 64-bit, i5, wd caviar black 3.5" 640GB). However, I can see one being handy in a laptop, since that's subject to more abuse and such that can make a mechanical HD fail. Admittedly, I have about 45GB used in total on my laptop, so a 60GB SSD would be fine there and would help battery life. Still, with current prices, it won't be happening.[/citation]
get a small boot if you ever see one on sale and play with it, at worst, you can make it a scratch disc for the hdd, at best, you see why they make small ssds.
i plan to post every ssd topic from now on with my story once the ssd gets put in my computer, for better or worse, because people need to know the difference, and not just boot time difference, computer feel difference.