High-capacity drives for desktops are scarce. For now.
Seagate Halts Barracuda Pro HDDs: A Replacement Is Coming : Read more
Seagate Halts Barracuda Pro HDDs: A Replacement Is Coming : Read more
Much like car manual transmissions are going the way of the dodo. Maybe as a niche, but you'll pay more for that niche.Meh. This was/is inevitable.
As motherboards with multiple M.2 sockets become more and more common, and performance NVMe drives, at capacities 2TBs and above, are going on sale for 10¢/GB, spindle hard drive production will continue to slow down. I know traditional HDD production won't go away for at least 10+ years but the shift is already starting.
Just two days ago, I picked up a performance 2TB NVMe for $199!
Meh. This was/is inevitable.
As motherboards with multiple M.2 sockets become more and more common, and performance NVMe drives, at capacities 2TBs and above, are going on sale for 10¢/GB, spindle hard drive production will continue to slow down. I know traditional HDD production won't go away for at least 10+ years but the shift is already starting.
Just two days ago, I picked up a performance 2TB NVMe for $199!
Maybe. But I still see a market for big HDDs in the future, even for home users. Smartphones can already record 4k videos, which take up a lot of space. Give a user one of those and some kids, and a drive can fill up really fast with all the party and travel videos. For this kind of storage, an SSD is a waste of money IMO.Yup. The bigger ones will be the last to go, along with the bigger SAS drives/NASs in the commercial market. Although, all-SSD commercial NASs are pretty commonplace now. Once those 8TB+ NVMe drives become readily available, at reasonable pricing, many home users that only need 3-6TBs of storage space will probably move to SSD-only.
Over the next 5 years we'll see small traditional HDDs all but disappear, unless they can make the new HAMR drives something like 2¢/GB or less.