This new 40TB hard drive from Seagate is just the beginning—50TB is coming fast!
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This post did not contain any content.schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 17:47 zuletzt editiert von
Hope you have a database for file management at that point.
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exos are fine if you don't mind them being loud as hell.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:10 zuletzt editiert vonThey're not really meant for desktop use, so not really an issue. Also don't keep your servers under your bed, the ventilation is quite bad.
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They're not really meant for desktop use, so not really an issue. Also don't keep your servers under your bed, the ventilation is quite bad.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:22 zuletzt editiert vonYup, if you can put em in a closet or something, you're golden.
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I'm very well accustomed to data loss and recovery.
Backs up anything "really important" to cloud storage
Yes, I do believe you are very well accustomed to data loss.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:27 zuletzt editiert vonAlmost every bit of data i have is redundant. The stuff I back up to cloud storage is the stuff I would care about if my house were to burn down. But that stuff is all double, and triple backed up, locally as well.
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Same here. I initially had high hopes that my family would take advantage, but apparently my parents would rather bug my siblings monthly for their Hulu/Netflix/Max/Disney+/Prime logins than install Plex or Jellyfin lol.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:28 zuletzt editiert vonone day you will get to move out and then you can build any kind of server you want
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I mean personally, for long term data hoarding, I dislike running anything below raidz2, and imo anything less than 5 disks in that setup is just silly and inefficient in terms of cost/benefit. So I currently have 5x16TB in raidz2. The 60% capacity efficiency kinda blows, but also I didn’t want to spend any more on rust than I did at the time, and the array is still working great, so whatever. For me, that was a reasonable balance between power draw, disk count, cost, and capacity.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:40 zuletzt editiert vonhonestly though. I kinda dislike that a 40 or 50tb mechanical drive is even a thing. What we really need is larger, more affordable solid state drives. Mechanical drives have had their place, but their limits are fairly clear at this point. And your point about rebuilding an array makes that obvious. They are just too slow. This move by seagate to make ridiculously large mechanical drives, should not be the beginning, as this article suggests. It should really be the end.
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It is not anecdotal, Seagate, FOR A DECADE, had quantifiably the worst drives with some models hitting 30% failure rate. They still, to this day, have shit models with over 10% and are almost always, the worst in back blaze reports of all data center drives. The only issue we have on the reports is nobody does random sampling and Seagate has always been the cheapest so they get overrepresented in reports.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:43 zuletzt editiert vonI would love to see your data on this if you have it available.
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No thanks. I'd rather have 4TB SSDs that cost $100. We were getting close to that in 2023, but then the memory manufacturers decided to collude and jacked up prices.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:51 zuletzt editiert vonTo be fair, I believe the increased pricing then was mostly due to sales, and thus production, tanking post COVID along with the big inflation for a couple of years. There was almost certainly greed from the most prominent memory makers tackedo n though.
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I thought prices seemed to be taking a while come down on 4TB SSDs as I had been looking at them for a while.
Don't really want it enough to spend £200 though. Would be to replace a 1+2TB HDD LVM. Now that I think about it, I have never copied a few TBs of data in one go.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 18:54 zuletzt editiert vonI just recently replaced a bunch of 1TB and 2TB drives with an 4TB SSD and 8TB HDD pretty cheaply back in December. I was trying to get those in before tariff shenanigans. Technically, those old drives are still in use, just for redundancy now. Even the scary old Seagate drives!
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Yes, if you have money to burn, sure. I'll go with the financially better approach.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 19:04 zuletzt editiert von thermal_shock@lemmy.world 6. März 2025, 21:05I specifically said to go off price and availability, just have a backup because they will fail.
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one day you will get to move out and then you can build any kind of server you want
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 19:11 zuletzt editiert vonI've been moved out for 25 years
I just hoped that my family would take advantage of me offering up my server for them to stream from.
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I've been moved out for 25 years
I just hoped that my family would take advantage of me offering up my server for them to stream from.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 19:13 zuletzt editiert vonlol, gotcha.
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This post did not contain any content.schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 19:36 zuletzt editiert von
If EA or Ubisoft don't get their shit together this won't be enough.
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i dunno man, i have about 20 years worth of bad experiences with seagate. none of their drives have ever been reliable for me. WD drives have always been rock solid and overall just better drives in my experience. I have two WD externals sitting on my desk right now that are almost 15 years old. Still going strong.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 20:43 zuletzt editiert vonSeagate have never once secretly changed the underlying disk technology on a NAS grade drive to one utterly unsuited for use in a NAS drive and then sold it as a NAS grade drive at a premium price because it's a NAS grade drive. So there's that.
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honestly though. I kinda dislike that a 40 or 50tb mechanical drive is even a thing. What we really need is larger, more affordable solid state drives. Mechanical drives have had their place, but their limits are fairly clear at this point. And your point about rebuilding an array makes that obvious. They are just too slow. This move by seagate to make ridiculously large mechanical drives, should not be the beginning, as this article suggests. It should really be the end.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 20:59 zuletzt editiert vonThey’re slow, but they’re WAY more robust than most SSDs - and in terms of $/TB, it’s not even close. Especially if you’re comparing to SLC enterprise-grade.
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…And it’s bound to be stupidly expensive.
Wish I could afford 20 of them, but not without winning the Powerball.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 21:04 zuletzt editiert von20 of them? Just curious, how would you use 800 or 1600 TB of storage?
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i don't mind that, if it means that lower capacity drives will get cheaper
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 21:05 zuletzt editiert von -
I have killed every single type of magnetic platter drive from every brand they are all bad
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 21:05 zuletzt editiert vonMaybe consider looking at what all those had in common... Ie you
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Many people can't accept that one drive model isn't going to kill a company or make everything from them bad.
The exception being the palladium drive. Although its not directly attributed to the fall of JTS, who at the time owned Atari. Its was clear from the frontline techs these things were absolute shit.
The irony is that 1 out of say 10,000 was perfect. So much so I still have one of the 1.2 gig's that still spins up and reads and writes fine.
Its nearly a unicorn though.schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 21:10 zuletzt editiert vonI had one of these, it worked perfectly for years. I might even still have it. I remember it being a significant leap in size and cost per MB.
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I had one of these, it worked perfectly for years. I might even still have it. I remember it being a significant leap in size and cost per MB.
schrieb am 3. Juni 2025, 21:36 zuletzt editiert von mehblah@lemmy.world 6. März 2025, 23:47We had failure rates over 90% on them. We sold around 8000 computers on contract to the local schools that year and took a hit to our rep. We started going from school to school replacing them before they could fail.
The drive in the picture is dated mar 16 97. I'm pretty sure it was one of thousands of warranty replacements we received. Like I said its still good but really hasn't been in service in over 30 years. I keep it because its a reminder of how bad, bad can be.
JT storage went out of business in 98. When we heard they had no one was surprised.
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