Do you think some historian in the future will be reading these post?
Do you think some historian in the future will be reading these post?
me on the left
It's all stored on magmatic platters, that shit's going to be toast in a 200 years time
in the future, people are gonna look at this and think it's some kind of cult
how would they be reading them?
I hab a BA in History gettign an honours this year and im readign this rite now, does that count???
if your australian then yes (new zealand does not count)
They burnt it so that you wouldn't read you cunts.
sun
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most data is on SSD now, nothing magnetic about it
You really think servers are storing petabytes of data on expensive flash storage?
yes, that's how it works, smaller, more efficient, and more reliable. it's not 1999 anymore.
Your fortune: Godly Luck
What if the sun blasts a magnetic storm on earth and every HDD and SSD ever gets deleted
We would all be dead so it doesn't matter.
Your fortune: Very Bad Luck
No that's not how it works when it costs four times as much per terrabyte.
no
Not to mention that the constant 24/7 reads and writes will wear out a SSD pretty fast.
It is exactly how it works though. flash drives are not those little finger sized things ne more. SSD will be gone in less than 2 years.
Your fortune: Good Luck
stuped
ill put your dickabyte in my mouth storage drive
grrr didn't mean to put SSD in that last sentence TT
Your fortune: ( ´_ゝ`)フーン
magnetic / mechanical wears out much quicker; everything will need maint obv cause we are still very stupid and haven't got the best solution to anything. But getting rid of hd is one step forward.
Your fortune: キタ━━━━━━(゚∀゚)━━━━━━ !!!!
Completely untrue. It's too costly and impractical and the new 3D NAND technology is making them even less durable.
lole u cud elongate neks all day
If they do... Then they will know... EVERYTHING
Google on why youtube does not use SSDs
>The cost per GB remains too high. More importantly, growth rates in capacity per dollar between disks and SSDs are relatively close (at least for SSDs that have sufficient numbers of program-erase cycles to use in data centers), so cost will not change enough over the coming decade.
datacenterknowledge.com
Just store everything on magnetic tape.
That's a good solution for data that seldom needs to be accessed but not a web server.