• @ccunning
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    71 year ago

    Storage costs are definitely going down.

    • @Nogami
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      1 year ago

      Maybe you’re thinking of home devices as opposed to commercial products that pay salaries for employees buildings, IT infrastructure, R&D, development, security, etc?

    • @stevehobbes
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      -11 year ago

      Yes, but that’s been slowing. They’re reaching limits until the next advance in HDDs.

      Flash is still much more expensive per GB.

      Power costs, server costs and Datacenter space are going up.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        The next advance on HDDs literally came last year. 20tb+ drives are available at ever decreasing prices these days, after being stalled at 16/18tb for a good few years.

        • @stevehobbes
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          01 year ago

          They’ve been out for a while, but it’s the same SMR tech. HAMR/MAMR are just starting to get going that will enable the next leap. But they’re not shipping in volume and reliability isn’t yet known. It’ll be a bit before you see them in widespread use.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            The HAMR/MAMR are exactly what I’m talking about. It is obviously unproven, but you can get new 20/22tb CMR HDDs now for 17.5¢ per GB very regularly, not counting sales. They’re what I’m currently running, and the normal price has dropped something close to 20% in the last year alone.

            • @stevehobbes
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              1 year ago

              HAMR is still not out, but will be 30+TB. We’ve had 20+TB drives for a long time. They’ve been plateaud there for a while.

              Price per GB hasn’t really been coming down much on CMR/SMR.

              Which was my point. Until HAMR is in use and at mass production, storage costs haven’t really come down.