OMG, hard drives have tripled in price, they are now almost the same price as SSD's.
Check out this little 80GB HDD, today the price is £65 :o
http://www.ebuyer.com/182432-wd-caviar-blue-wd800aajb-80gb-hard-drive-ide-7200rpm-8mb-cache-wd800aajb (http://www.ebuyer.com/182432-wd-caviar-blue-wd800aajb-80gb-hard-drive-ide-7200rpm-8mb-cache-wd800aajb)
WOw - I think my 1TB drive cost me about that :o
Well, you gotta know that buying replacement parts for antiques and museum pieces is bound to cost more than the "modern" stuff. :P That same drive in SATA 2 probably only costs 12 Shillings now, right? :D
I know that was a joke Dave :LOL:, but unfortunately its across the board, HDD's have rocketed in price.
Sorry, Data. Just a little levity, to blunt the bitter disappointment, is all. :(
Do you folks even use Shillings anymore? Or Farthings, for that matter? Just curious. :)
We no longer use shillings or farthings. They were scrapped when we went decimal in 1971.
For a country that went decimal though we still use a lot of imperial !
Not as much as the US of A. and their gallons are smaller than ours.
As for HDDs; that's due to the flooding in asia. A HDD plant got flooded and there is a global shortage in them. Market forces being what they are, the price goes up.
Quote from: Snowcrash on November 22, 2011, 18:12:29 PM
As for HDDs; that's due to the flooding in asia. A HDD plant got flooded and there is a global shortage in them. Market forces being what they are, the price goes up.
I didn't even know HDD's grew on plants. :-\
I wonder where one would get the seeds for a HDD plant. I looked through several of Grandma's flower/seed catalogs, but nothing. Of course, I'd much rather have a CPU/MoBo plant, since that's the next upgrade, but...
Thats what I noticed when I looked for another HD for this computer, about $100 for a small HD, I ended up buying a SSD. Funny but almost all the newer computers still use the HD.
Carl2
I've just bought a 1TB USB 2.5" drive for £100. Seems about right to me.
Just checked with eBuyer and 1TB 3.5" internals are about £90 from a low of about £65. 2TB about £110.
Old bits always get more expensive. Buy what is shifting the most units, always cheaper.
I just checked the prices for SSD and hard drives at newegg again, This time they are much more reasonable, quite a few from $69 to $100. The SSD has the OS and the original is for storage, The faster boot time is easy to get used to.
Carl2
about time prices start coming down, I really need at least another 1 tb of storage if not more. I will probably end up buying 2 TB's, next month if all goes well.
I've gone the NAS drive route for mass storage. There are plenty out there and everything on my network can read it inc. my PS3 (i do believe xboxes are ok too). Means I don't need my main rig on to watch programs.
I'm running at about 1TB in my rig and a 2TB NAS (single hdd). There are plenty of 4 hdd NAS drives with all the usual RAID stuff. Most people I know just mirror for backup, rather than stripe for speed.
If you do go the NAS route, make sure all your equipment is 1000 base esp. your router/switches. 100 base is soooo slow when moving 100s of GB at a time.
The only annoyance I have with my Buffalo drive is when watching progams via my PS3, it pauses every hour for a few secs. I'm fairly sure it's the NAS drive indexing and is only a problem with the PS3. It is using a UNIX (linux?) media server built into the drive.
Hi Snowcrash Nas drives are really nice, I would get one if I was not building a home server. I recently had my main rig configured as a daul boot setup, with windows server on the second partition. I got aggravated having to reboot constantly to access the server, so I removed it. I miss having it but I don't miss the constant rebooting. Hopefully soon I will have my Server finished being built. Hard drive and psu is all that is needed now. Maybe a raid card, but not sure if I want a hardware raid or software raid set up. I need some time to look into pros and cons of both before I decide.
I never knew nas had some of those integrated console features, thanks for letting me know about them :thumbsup:
I have used software raid and it wasn't that good, it seemed slow and laggy at times, it also can be CPU intensive when copying lots of files, I wouldn't personally recommend it.
Hardware is by far the better options IMHO
If you want the raid to backup your files there is another option, you could just use a backup software like Data Replicator 3 (Freddy put me on to that).
If you are looking for speed and better performance out of a raid, you would be better off getting a single SSD, they are so much faster than a pair of HDD in a raid.
But I think that maybe you are after the raid for the server reliability.
Some of my customers didn't want to pay top money for HHD so they went for SSD, this has left me with a few HDD to get rid of.
HDD anyone?
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Wowowow. Lovely modern ribbon cable stuff. ;D
The best thing you can do with them is...
1) hi tech door stops.
2) display art. open 'em up to show the platters and heads in a display case.
Datahopa thanks for the tips about raid controllers :thumbsup:
QuoteBut I think that maybe you are after the raid for the server reliability.
I'm after two things actually. You are correct about server reliability, but I also want fairly decent speeds.
this is what I will be using the server for: 1st and most important Data back up and storage / data loss prevention, reason to use a raid controller
size of ssd are to small for this atm, for I need TB's of space. I will probably start of with 2TB's x 2 or 3 depending on raid setup.
2nd is to host temp websites while building, fixing, and or testing. not to sure this is good for SSD for constant re-wrights
3rd streaming music SSD would be great for this part though