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#11
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"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I doubt if the cloud ever kills off spinners. The cloud is just moving the storage to a different location. As to using the cloud. Maybe for pictures. But for any financial info, or stuff I do not want in public, no way! The other problem is retrieving stuff from the cloud. Limited by the internet. And the internet is going to have a big prob,me very shortly is and lots of hardware is going to have to be upgraded. Lengthen the address space as running out of available numbers. I think the cloud is viable, but not the replacement for local large storage. I own a bunch of Rack Space stock, so I am betting on cloud usage" |
#12
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. |
#13
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/31/2014 8:50 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. For the average, non-commercial user, how much really "important" data is kept on a computer that could blow up at any time? The "cloud" really isn't for storage of important data either but I'll bet 90 percent of the user created files stored on a hard drive could be safely stored in the cloud, especially since there are multiple storage spaces that can add redundancy. . |
#14
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/31/14, 9:16 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/31/2014 8:50 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. For the average, non-commercial user, how much really "important" data is kept on a computer that could blow up at any time? The "cloud" really isn't for storage of important data either but I'll bet 90 percent of the user created files stored on a hard drive could be safely stored in the cloud, especially since there are multiple storage spaces that can add redundancy. . And besides, it's much easier for the NSA to suck down the data of a zillion users from the cloud than it is to get it out of a zillion individual computers. (It's sarcasm, fellas...don't take it too seriously.) -- There’s no point crying over spilled 4-Methylcyclohexanemethanol. |
#15
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/31/2014 9:25 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 1/31/14, 9:16 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/31/2014 8:50 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. For the average, non-commercial user, how much really "important" data is kept on a computer that could blow up at any time? The "cloud" really isn't for storage of important data either but I'll bet 90 percent of the user created files stored on a hard drive could be safely stored in the cloud, especially since there are multiple storage spaces that can add redundancy. . And besides, it's much easier for the NSA to suck down the data of a zillion users from the cloud than it is to get it out of a zillion individual computers. (It's sarcasm, fellas...don't take it too seriously.) If the NSA wants a photo of Sam Adams taking a dump in the back yard, they can have it. |
#16
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/31/14, 9:32 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/31/2014 9:25 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 1/31/14, 9:16 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/31/2014 8:50 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. For the average, non-commercial user, how much really "important" data is kept on a computer that could blow up at any time? The "cloud" really isn't for storage of important data either but I'll bet 90 percent of the user created files stored on a hard drive could be safely stored in the cloud, especially since there are multiple storage spaces that can add redundancy. . And besides, it's much easier for the NSA to suck down the data of a zillion users from the cloud than it is to get it out of a zillion individual computers. (It's sarcasm, fellas...don't take it too seriously.) If the NSA wants a photo of Sam Adams taking a dump in the back yard, they can have it. See, now, there's a perfect example of why you science-math guys need more English liberal arts classes. That doggie I assume was not *taking* a dump. He was *leaving* a dump. ![]() -- There’s no point crying over spilled 4-Methylcyclohexanemethanol. |
#17
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posted to rec.boats
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On 1/31/2014 9:40 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 1/31/14, 9:32 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/31/2014 9:25 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 1/31/14, 9:16 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/31/2014 8:50 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. For the average, non-commercial user, how much really "important" data is kept on a computer that could blow up at any time? The "cloud" really isn't for storage of important data either but I'll bet 90 percent of the user created files stored on a hard drive could be safely stored in the cloud, especially since there are multiple storage spaces that can add redundancy. . And besides, it's much easier for the NSA to suck down the data of a zillion users from the cloud than it is to get it out of a zillion individual computers. (It's sarcasm, fellas...don't take it too seriously.) If the NSA wants a photo of Sam Adams taking a dump in the back yard, they can have it. See, now, there's a perfect example of why you science-math guys need more English liberal arts classes. That doggie I assume was not *taking* a dump. He was *leaving* a dump. ![]() Oh? So tell me. Do you "take" a nap, "grab" a nap or engage in a restful period of temporary unconsciousness? |
#18
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 09:16:23 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 1/31/2014 8:50 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. For the average, non-commercial user, how much really "important" data is kept on a computer that could blow up at any time? The "cloud" really isn't for storage of important data either but I'll bet 90 percent of the user created files stored on a hard drive could be safely stored in the cloud, especially since there are multiple storage spaces that can add redundancy. . You're probably right, But I can't see winding up a cloud site for the return. My most important stuff is on paper anyway - titles, licenses, judgments, military records, etc. |
#19
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On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 09:45:37 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 1/31/2014 9:40 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 1/31/14, 9:32 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/31/2014 9:25 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 1/31/14, 9:16 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/31/2014 8:50 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 20:32:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/30/2014 2:03 PM, Califbill wrote: Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On 1/28/2014 8:19 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: ...if your iMac has a fusion drive, this is a pretty good read on how it actually works. http://www.anandtech.com/show/6679/a...s-fusion-drive Interesting. I don't have a clue if my iMac has fusion drive or not. I don't think so, but I seem to recall reading something about it somewhere. It's obsolete tech. SSD's are cheaper now. And you don't need them anyway. I have an SSD for my OS. It boots faster. BFD. Can't tell the difference anywhere else. My games are still on spinners, plain and not RAIDed. No noticeable difference. If you're moving massive files from SSD to SSD, it'll be faster. SSD's will kill off spinners as prices fall. Be a long time before SSD kills off spinners! Just the price difference per Terabyte will keep hard drives selling for years. You remind me of a fellow engineer when I worked for Maxtor. He stated, he could put all the storage anybody needed on his desktop. We were designing a 1.9gb 5" drive at the time. Early 1990's. He did not really have a clue about storage requirements. Was PC centric. When I designed disk controllers for DEC systems, customers were using 600 MB washing machine sized drives and were limited by room real estate as to how many they could install. You have to consider commercial storage requirements. Credit reporting agencies, NSA, NASA, banks and all in RAID systems. I don't think it will be decreased price or additional capacity of SSDs that kill off spinners. I think it will be the fact that you just don't need a lot of local storage and future computers won't have it. The trend is "cloud" storage and has been for several years. I can't think of anything 'important' I'd trust to cloud storage. Anything *really* important will get dumped to paper/CD (or both) and put in the bank. For the average, non-commercial user, how much really "important" data is kept on a computer that could blow up at any time? The "cloud" really isn't for storage of important data either but I'll bet 90 percent of the user created files stored on a hard drive could be safely stored in the cloud, especially since there are multiple storage spaces that can add redundancy. . And besides, it's much easier for the NSA to suck down the data of a zillion users from the cloud than it is to get it out of a zillion individual computers. (It's sarcasm, fellas...don't take it too seriously.) If the NSA wants a photo of Sam Adams taking a dump in the back yard, they can have it. See, now, there's a perfect example of why you science-math guys need more English liberal arts classes. That doggie I assume was not *taking* a dump. He was *leaving* a dump. ![]() Oh? So tell me. Do you "take" a nap, "grab" a nap or engage in a restful period of temporary unconsciousness? LOL! |
#20
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