200TB optical discs are on their way, but 8K Blu-ray certainly isn't
Although we can probably remove a nail from 4K Blu-ray's coffin
www.whathifi.com
200TB CD??? For some reason, that made me laugh.200TB optical discs are on their way, but 8K Blu-ray certainly isn't
Although we can probably remove a nail from 4K Blu-ray's coffinwww.whathifi.com
Cheaping out is my guess. They save a little money but still charge you more for a PC with undersized storage space.can someone explain to me why they don't put 2TB or more hard drives into PC's? i'm too lazy to google
If they put storage on your machine then they couldn't sell you cloud storage . . . .Cheaping out is my guess. They save a little money but still charge you more for a PC with undersized storage space.
The average person doesn't need that much storage in their day-to-day life. Also, everything is moving to SSDs and the $/TB ratio of SSDs has not reached that of HDDs (yet).can someone explain to me why they don't put 2TB or more hard drives into PC's? i'm too lazy to google
When it comes to HDDs, I stand by to Western Digital. Still, no matter the brand/maker of the HDD, they are all mechanical drives so they are all prone to die eventually. SSDs don't have the same issue since they are not mechanical, but they still have their cons.I suppose that is what secondary and tertiary and etc hard drives are for. There are some real whoppers out there too. Some day I would like to purchase one of those 20+ tb drives but still out of my price range.
The average person doesn't need that much storage in their day-to-day life. Also, everything is moving to SSDs and the $/TB ratio of SSDs has not reached that of HDDs (yet).
I have 2TB and 4TB HDDs for my digital library (games, movies, music, comics, tech books) in a NAS. I have the occasional photos and video from concerts as well. But yeah... Average Joe is content with the 128GB SSD that comes with his laptop and, if needed, will use a cloud storage provider for his wedding photos, his grandma's recipes and whatnot.