Toshiba Will Not Release New 15K RPM HDDs
Click here to post a comment for Toshiba Will Not Release New 15K RPM HDDs on our message forum
vbetts
Moderator
I am almost not surprised, 15k drives are not cheap and with SSD reliability on the rise well....The choice is simple.
Silva
I understand why they existed before SSD's become price reachable.
Now there's no point, anyone wanting performance will get an SSD and for storage an HDD.
schmidtbag
Makes sense. Faster HDDs are more power hungry, noisy, hot, expensive, and failure-prone than their slower counterparts. Meanwhile, you could buy an SSD for a similar price and get something more efficient, quieter, cooler, smaller, and reliable than the slower HDDs. Seems like a no-brainer.
Nowadays, you buy an HDD when you just need oodles of terabytes for a low price. Most things that need so much space don't care much about seek times. With RAID1, sequential read times are pretty fast on high-capacity drives.
Noisiv
schmidtbag
Noisiv
:thumbup: Oh yeah, I thought stripping, RAID0.
Is been a while since I've ran RAID...
skypx
I'm sorry but I'm still stuck on who wrote the the article. "news HHDs" Wow!
yasamoka
waltc3
Yes,, SSDs are the future. Right now, the only thing going for platter drives is cost, making hard drives the optimum choice for storage needs that don't require top speed access--1TB 7200 rpm WD blues are $50 in most places; put two together in RAID 0 for $100 for 2 TB's (which I have installed at home right now, along with an SSD and a 2TB AHCI single drive). I was never a fan of the old 10k rotational platters, either. An interesting factoid: I've been running RAID 0 in a variety of platforms over the last 15 years (as varied you may imagine) and never had a single drive failure in a RAID 0 setup. In fact, the only drive failures I've *ever* had came with drives configured to run as IDE...;) But the drive doesn't care how you run it; it runs the same in RAID 0 as it does in IDE/AHCI mode. Probability failure for a RAID 0 drive is exactly the same as for any IDE/AHCI drive (of course.) Weird, how much superstition still revolves around RAID 0, in this day and age.