Prediction proved: SSDs now cheaper than hard disks

Prediction proved: SSDs now cheaper than hard disks

In my previous post Will the Thailand floods prompt a move to SSDs?, I posited that the floods in Thailand would increase the price of traditional spinning media so that it would rise above the cost off SSDs (or at least make the move to higher performance storage systems easier to justify.

With the following article appearing in The Register: NEWSFLASH: Chips cheaper than disks, it would appear that this has happened, at least for enterprise class hard disks and SSD devices.

“Recent HDD/SSD distribution indicates an average 20-25 per cent increase in Seagate and HGST?s enterprise-class HDDs (e.g., 15K.5 73/74GB HDDs nearing approximately $3/GB), which compares to OCZ?s 6Gbit/s SAS Talos SSD at $1.98/GB; single-ported Deneva SAS at about $1.55/GB).” – Aaron Rakers

John Dixon

John Dixon is the Principal Consultant of thirteen-ten nanometre networks Ltd, based in Wiltshire, United Kingdom. He has a wide range of experience, (including, but not limited to) operating, designing and optimizing systems and networks for customers from global to domestic in scale. He has worked with many international brands to implement both data centres and wide-area networks across a range of industries. He is currently supporting a major SD-WAN vendor on the implementation of an environment supporting a major global fast-food chain.

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