this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2023
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[–] cassetti@kbin.social 17 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (7 children)

Crazy to think it was only about fifteen years ago the small Data-storage server reseller I worked for was selling their own in-house server racks - a whole 52U rack filled with Supermicro drive bays to store a petabyte of data was $300k and that was a steal of a deal at the time.

Sure, that system was redundant and this is a single pbSSD, but still crazy to see how fast things are evolving

[–] ungoogleable@lemmy.ml 6 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Nit pick, this is a 256TB SSD, so you'd need four to make a PB of raw space, and probably more than that to allow for RAID and effective space. PBSSD is their name for tech to enable PB scale arrays of such SSDs.

[–] cassetti@kbin.social 4 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Yeah no doubt, a RAID would be more effective. But still a 256TB SSD is absolutely insane when you think about it, compared to where technology was 10 or 20 years ago.

[–] Wahots@pawb.social 2 points 2 years ago (3 children)

Good lord, I remember our home PC having a 145gb drive, thereabouts.

[–] rambaroo@lemmy.world 5 points 2 years ago

I remember when my family's home PC had a 500 MB hard drive.

And before then at school the old comps had no hard drive, just rom for the OS and a disk drive

[–] tony@lemmy.hoyle.me.uk 4 points 2 years ago

My first hard drive was 20 megabytes. That was considered hugely advanced.. you couldn't even boot from it, needed a boot floppy.

[–] some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 2 years ago

Hell, my first external drive was 120MB. That was to augment the storage of my 80GB internal drive.

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