Classicamiga Forum Retro Edition
Thread: SSD data retention
Harrison 05:15 6th September 2023
Yeah, normally we think of Bunker or shelter, not Silo. But in the series they are round like a silo and it sounds better. The book was called Wool though.
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Kin Hell 10:40 6th September 2023
Originally Posted by Harrison:
Yeah, normally we think of Bunker or shelter, not Silo. But in the series they are round like a silo and it sounds better. The book was called Wool though.
Wool.jpg

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Harrison 08:52 7th September 2023
I've just started reading Wool and they seem to have stuck very closely to the books in the series, which is very unusual these days. From brief descriptions of the other 2 books they explore back when the silos were being build, as well as into the future beyond the first book. If that's true they might need to diverge from the second series, otherwise the same characters/actors wouldn't be possible.

But anyway, back on topic. As much as we were all happy for much faster, smaller silient solidstate HDDs, the limitations of data integrity are present. So I will be sticking with mechanical drive in my NAS to back everything up.
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Kin Hell 07:08 8th September 2023
It's crazy tbh H isn't it.


One thing one minute with tech & then another the next.... It's all becoming very much like fashion & the wind is always changing direction.

I always thought Technology was supposed to be ever going forward.

Not the cheapest of places but some ideas on current sizing & pricing from 4GB up....

https://www.overclockers.co.uk/pc-co...ort=price_desc
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J T 05:50 11th September 2023
SSD for commonly used things (like the OS) and mechanical HDDs for storage seem to show that the best of both is possible.
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Harrison 08:28 12th September 2023
Agreed. But with M2 SSD storage suddenly dropping a lot in price you can get fast Gen4 drives much cheaper now, so many are ditching data security for speed and convenience.

A 1TB M2 drive can now be bought for around £40 and 2TB for around £80. Even the fastest versions such as the Samsung 980 Pro 2TB are down to £120.

This means in a main PC you can have multiple large capacity M2 SSDs and no mechanical drives. Eliminates noise and dramatically cutting heat, as well as improving airflow.

But this obviously leads back to the original data retention subject. And my point being that with many now fully adopting solidstate storage their data is not safe long-term. We do have cloud storage these days which many people use. Often we get so much free. Devices such as phones and OSs are designed now to utilise cloud storage for backups. But that's only for general day to day things like photos and office documents. For something more precious such as large design projects or a retro rom collection mechanism drives are still a must.

We will lose a lot going into the future. Have you ever dug an older computer out and fired it up. Going though everything in it and discovering old pictures or games and things you created that you have forgotten about? Try this after leaving a system sitting for 5+ years in the future and the drives will be blank.

This also raises the question about cloud storage. How safe is your data in the cloud? If you storage was given to you free how long is the retention? How long after you stop using it will it get wiped? If you pay for larger cloud storage it will only last a long a you keep paying. You can up to a drive or burn a disc and you can store it indefinitely to be accessed much later. Just as traditional photo albums safeguarded memories for those in the future to discover and enjoy. Stop paying for cloud storage and it's gone.

When loved ones die in the future their data might die with them, leaving no record they were ever here.
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