"laser, heat assisted magnetic recording" that is a modern day version of magneto-optical disks from the late 1980s and 1990s, they were great, robust, reliable storage. I used them. Does FridayCheckout remember those?
Not DVD-RAM, they are magneto-optical MO-disks, with added quantum tech. If you do not know MO-disks see the Mission Impossible (1996) film where the plot centers on obtaining a 90 mm (3.5") MO-disk.
@rhoharane it bothers me how bloated it's become. It's also amazing that it's almost 2025 and we don't have cool computer operating systems that look like the ones on Sci fi movies. Way to go backwards windows... Had that in 7. Now 11 has even less customization.
@@truckywuckyuwu I'm using shutup10++, very glad that it exists. Windows honestly isn't that bad, which is to say it's usable, but it's still a whole lot of missed potential.
The potential for HAMR to revolutionize storage capacity is huge. It's exciting to see innovation that could lead to 4-5TB drives becoming mainstream in the near future.
How does Toshiba's FC-MAMR compare to HAMR? Is it basically a subset of HAMR? I think you should be able to buy a 18tb drive from toshiba with HAMR already in it for under $200
You know, I know some people ask why anyone would want a gaming device that can play PC games but doesn't run Windows. But the fact is, I just loath Windows. So while I'm not big on handheld gaming (despite my only current gen console being a Switch). If Valve got somebody to make a 'steam box' that came with a controller, let me hook it up to my TV and let me download an play games that are intended for Windows but on hardware that doesn't require me to run Windows? Yeah, sign me up!
I like Fridays because of your show. You make me happy. Watched every single episode of this series. Your channel is my favorite tech channel. Keep up the good work Martin!
2:09 Gaming on Linux is already around as much of a "thing" as it could be. Pretty much every decently-popular game which isn't primarily online and/or has intrusive anti-cheat already works. On the other hand, games which do have intrusive anti-cheat will likely never come to Linux as the possibility that anything explicitly intended to enable kernel-level anti-cheat is practically impossible, even individual distros adding such functionality would be met with extreme backlash.
I wish that was true. But only game you are really guaranteed to play on Linux is gambling! Because you never know if a game will work or not. Even the Proton Database is a bit misleading in this regard. I don't consider a game that technically runs, but displays everything without the correct lighting or shaders "working" on Linux. I know this is a steep demand, but games on Linux do not only need to work, the need to work well!
@@overflow7276 That's why I specified "Pretty much every decently-popular game", as generally a game with a big enough following will have patches made for it if possible, even for games with very major issues.
@@overflow7276with all due respect mate, that has not been my experience at all. I've been using linux exclusively for the past two years and literally every single game I tried to run ran perfectly. granted, I don't play a ton of online games, and the ones I do play don't have the kernel level anticheat. Every sjngleplayer game I tried runs well, that's more than good enough, for me at least.
All of the Linux distros need to work on interoperability & pick a standard for companies to develop against natively. The array of binary file formats & package managers fighting each other is silly. Commercial software should not be downloaded from the package managers. Documentation needs to be human friendly. Every distro should install from an ISO.
I wonder what the write speed is on that 32TB HDD. If it's still only 100 - 200 MB/s you would have to write 2 - 4 days non-stop to fill one of those drives. That really limits the practical use cases for such a drive.
I got to be honest. All Seagate hard drives I've ever owned have broken inside of 3 years. I still have a Hitachi and Wd that are over 7 years old still going strong. I'll wait till the other companies come up with the laser hds.
I'm going to be replacing my 13 year old WD HD today with another WD hard drive. There's nothing wrong with the original, I just want a backup. Can't beat that reliability.
@@joemerino3243 True. I steered away from them years ago when my first harddrive from them starting making noise less than 2 years after I bought it. There was a video online that was discussing harddrive reliability, and Seagate was the worst. Had tons of data behind it. Makes me believe this laser HD will probably last less than a year.
As someone who has built many computers, I have never ever in my entire usage of Seagate (or Maxtor in the old times) encountered any of them break, I still own an external one which is been working 13 years. In my experience WD are the worst drives I have ever encountered. Much slower when they're half way full, and break more often.
Man, I love your videos and the info you provide. Have you ever considered making shorts of each of these sections? It should be easier to share with friends
You can use the clip feature to select and send a specific part of a video, but yes I've actually thought of shorts. Still not sure how I could make it would work, but maybe soon! :)
@@TheFridayCheckout Wouldn't it be possible to just cut smaller clips from the episodes (i.e. the release monitor section or individual stories from the main section) and adjust the layout for shorts by including you in front of the camera as well as the on screen info on top of each other? Basically not having to change anything besides the layout? I think this format works just as well as a long video as it does as segmented into several shorts.
The hard disk manufacturers really can't think of anything better than squeezing ever higher capacities into 3.5 inch housings and leaving everything else as it is. No (new) SSHDs, no HHDs with more than one actuator (higher speed and IOPS) and no support for NVMe 2.0.
I'd love it if maybe we'd get S-ATA 4 at some point... And if not, maybe consumer boards and drives that support SAS4 all well and good that we now have 32tb HDDs, but if their data interface keeps being so slow what's the point? Much more relevant for consumer ssds of course, but we're nevertheless already approaching that limit on HDDs, too. I see no reason why the only actually fast consumer ssds all have to use nvme
They'll probably use U.2 instead of SATA. U2 is basically NVMe but with a wired connector instead of the M2 slot we are used to. NVMe is more of an open standard and uses PCIe.
@@thekakan Yeah, but consumer CPUs don't have the amount of PCIe lanes required for having 5-6 drives + 1 GPU + 1 other expansion card, unless we get something like a trimode hba card, and then we're back at where we're already at. I also wish there were better cables for U.2 drives... My current boot drive is U.2 and my motherboard didn't have an Oculink connector and no open M.2 slots for an M.2=>Oculink adapter, so now my U.2 boot drive awkwardly sits in a PCIe x8 -> U.2 carrier card... And even if the motherboard had Oculink connectors, they don't come with power, so it's always an awkward cable with Sata-power and Oculink on one end and U.2 on the other... Personally I'd love it if we just had SAS-4 for consumer drives, with proper cables and a proper SAS-4 controller embedded on the mainboard.
It's a shame the hard drive will likely be insanely expensive. if consumer drives had that tech for a reasonabe price it would be groundbreaking. Time capsule it idiotic. The whole point of airtags are that its tiny. If you want something better just get a rechargable via USB-c card which is super slim as well.
Honestly, considering the FCC's rip&replace program for Huawei and ZTE is still under 20% done, you might as well make the TP Link ban only apply for consumer and military. Seems like US companies, even internet service providers, will just use banned equipment forever unless it breaks down or they get a fat enough check for replacing the stuff.
Say what you want about spinning rust but having 12TB of dirt-cheap storage (paid just $100 each for 2 6TB drives) so that I can have my entire DVD collection along with my entire music library along with recording all my gameplay footage? Really enjoying that. Also great for my single player games where I don't need NVME speeds, all the classic games like the Bioshock series and all my boomer shooters really don't benefit from being on NVME so having all my favorite games ready to go when I have the urge to play them is quite nice.
most of the world is missing out on the Fritz!Box routers. Incredible software and great hardware. I don't get why they don't market those world-wide. yet. maybe.
As long as you dont use ditect x there is no need to optimize for linux. Vulkan or opengl aready make Godot multiplatform, but like anything you need to compile it for the target os anyway.
The issue isn't compatibility, Linux has been compatible to games. The problem is economic incentives to keep it working. Compiling for Linux like Windows introduces problems that cost to solve and so that's why Linux isn't natively supported
When used in large arrays performance isn't the issue and moving to these high capacity drives could reduce power and cooling requirements for large datacenters.
I thought Waymo didn't work well in snow or heavy rain because it produces tons of noise on the lidar sensors? They aren't even allowed in snowy or rainy US states yet, but Japan wants to risk it?
Is that Ericsson associated with 5G a Sony company? I just wonder because Sony does make a lot of smartphones. They would be their Xperia product line and there must be a ton of different models that came along over the years by now. I am quite pleased with the level of detail in photos from my Xperia 1. The only time they come out bad is if the lighting is awful or there is a smudge over the camera lenses causing a streak or blur. Sometimes the exposure is not optimal but this one does predictive capturing behind the scenes silently snapping a couple of different photos you can chose from with different shutter timing and stuff. Those ones show in the gallery with a small icon in their corner denoting that the photo is one of those. It does not always do that but instead when it thinks it could have done better.
Waiting for the right solution for home routers, your router gets hacked and your government bricks your router before the hackers steal your life savings.
Based Steam killing Windows as the default gamer operating system. If this continues I'm going to switch because windows is not only bloated but full of Spyware
Photonic lasers? really, what other kind of laser there is? All lasers including Masers use photons. These drives are not good for customers with rebuild times in the days, but they are useful to hyperscalers that can have massive redundancy and still save money vs SSDs. Even so, HDD already lost in duration, density and anytime price
Next year will be awesome for portable consoles. Probably the final consolidation of Linux/Windows handhelds, specially considering the low energy consumption of this generation of processors. And probably the Nintendo Switch 2 (at this point I coundn't care less about it, but it wil be huge)
It doesnt matter. Just that ''screech, click, screech'' sound is enough to put you off, let alone caring where that darn needle is gonna land in case of a blackout.
Not really. Read write speed isn't important if your priority is price-per-Gigabyte. Higher capacity SSDs are still expensive. And when your use case is not speed limited, it can be extremely cost effective to buy hard drives and install them in a redundancy array for the sake of data backups.
So Seagate's next generation Hard Disk Drives (HDD) will have read and write as fast or maybe even faster than Solid-state Drives (SSD) than the previous generations' HDDs ?
Im never going to buy seagate again. These hard drives always fail. Whenever i see a seagate lying around I always assume its dead and I would be correct
Great news! Let me know when Samsung reinvents the SSD and we finally get some 48TB SSDs that consumer can afford they promised many years ago when they announced the 3D storage drives.
Didn't trump want to ban tik tok, but then they gave him money (or something) and then he was all for them? I'm going to guess that if they offer him enough the ban goes away.
🔴 Live stream: ua-cam.com/users/livexrresUNI8-I
Get 40% off Nebula (sponsored): go.nebula.tv/tfc
Great video as always mate!
I wonder if the laser HD read write times are better?
"laser, heat assisted magnetic recording" that is a modern day version of magneto-optical disks from the late 1980s and 1990s, they were great, robust, reliable storage. I used them. Does FridayCheckout remember those?
SSDs: “look what they have to do to mimic a fraction of our power”
Thumbnail says 32"GB"
1997 has been great so far!
i legit thought it was an entire new paradigm of storage (which it technically is) that was just like the tiny chip SSDs
Fixed, thanks!
He fixed it.
It is still in the video at ua-cam.com/video/-HyR373zkX4/v-deo.html
So.... seagate's new HDDs are quantum DVD-RAM.
This doesn’t impress you? Are you a quantum scientist 😂
@@chatsnoirblamo 🤣
That is bad news considering how unreliable DVD-RAM was for me.
Not DVD-RAM, they are magneto-optical MO-disks, with added quantum tech.
If you do not know MO-disks see the Mission Impossible (1996) film where the plot centers on obtaining a 90 mm (3.5") MO-disk.
I was thinking magnet-optical as well!
valve is really pushing linux gaming to the world
I hope so. I'm tired of windows
windows is pushing linux to anyone who can make the switch
@rhoharane it bothers me how bloated it's become.
It's also amazing that it's almost 2025 and we don't have cool computer operating systems that look like the ones on Sci fi movies. Way to go backwards windows... Had that in 7. Now 11 has even less customization.
@@truckywuckyuwu I'm using shutup10++, very glad that it exists. Windows honestly isn't that bad, which is to say it's usable, but it's still a whole lot of missed potential.
no wonder why linus said valve might actually be going to save linux. i hope they make some f***ing worthy contribution.
The potential for HAMR to revolutionize storage capacity is huge. It's exciting to see innovation that could lead to 4-5TB drives becoming mainstream in the near future.
Yes, they are magneto-optical disks for GenZ.
the only question is - do you really need to store all that crap so someone can then go and train an AI model off of it
How does Toshiba's FC-MAMR compare to HAMR? Is it basically a subset of HAMR?
I think you should be able to buy a 18tb drive from toshiba with HAMR already in it for under $200
When Zlatan downloads Windows, Microsoft accepts his terms and conditions.
D Links has Security flaws and tp link gets banned. gets easier to choose a router
But what 6G 160Hz access point will I get now? I dont have the money for ubitquity and Tenda or Zykel sound sketchy 😭
You know, I know some people ask why anyone would want a gaming device that can play PC games but doesn't run Windows. But the fact is, I just loath Windows. So while I'm not big on handheld gaming (despite my only current gen console being a Switch). If Valve got somebody to make a 'steam box' that came with a controller, let me hook it up to my TV and let me download an play games that are intended for Windows but on hardware that doesn't require me to run Windows? Yeah, sign me up!
There’s solid evidence that Valve is planning a consolized PC, another Steam Machine. Check out Tyler McVicker.
I like Fridays because of your show. You make me happy. Watched every single episode of this series. Your channel is my favorite tech channel. Keep up the good work Martin!
2:09 Gaming on Linux is already around as much of a "thing" as it could be.
Pretty much every decently-popular game which isn't primarily online and/or has intrusive anti-cheat already works.
On the other hand, games which do have intrusive anti-cheat will likely never come to Linux as the possibility that anything explicitly intended to enable kernel-level anti-cheat is practically impossible, even individual distros adding such functionality would be met with extreme backlash.
I wish that was true. But only game you are really guaranteed to play on Linux is gambling!
Because you never know if a game will work or not.
Even the Proton Database is a bit misleading in this regard.
I don't consider a game that technically runs, but displays everything without the correct lighting or shaders "working" on Linux.
I know this is a steep demand, but games on Linux do not only need to work, the need to work well!
There is no benefit pf using Linux over windows for the average person.
So Linux needs to be better than windows, than it can become mainstream
@@overflow7276 That's why I specified "Pretty much every decently-popular game", as generally a game with a big enough following will have patches made for it if possible, even for games with very major issues.
@@overflow7276with all due respect mate, that has not been my experience at all. I've been using linux exclusively for the past two years and literally every single game I tried to run ran perfectly. granted, I don't play a ton of online games, and the ones I do play don't have the kernel level anticheat. Every sjngleplayer game I tried runs well, that's more than good enough, for me at least.
All of the Linux distros need to work on interoperability & pick a standard for companies to develop against natively.
The array of binary file formats & package managers fighting each other is silly.
Commercial software should not be downloaded from the package managers.
Documentation needs to be human friendly.
Every distro should install from an ISO.
That Release Monitor is perfect for my budget
I know, right? I also have 60k USD TVs myself!
@@TheFridayCheckout Absolutely! That transparent TV would look great next to my Micro LED one !
The 1.5 millionaires watching the Friday Checkout just got really excited
I wonder what the write speed is on that 32TB HDD. If it's still only 100 - 200 MB/s you would have to write 2 - 4 days non-stop to fill one of those drives. That really limits the practical use cases for such a drive.
What no it wouldn't. I can fill it up with all my blu ray movies and TV shows for my plex server
Why is the government response to tp link so much more fierce than the one to Pegasus ? 😮
I got to be honest. All Seagate hard drives I've ever owned have broken inside of 3 years. I still have a Hitachi and Wd that are over 7 years old still going strong.
I'll wait till the other companies come up with the laser hds.
I'm going to be replacing my 13 year old WD HD today with another WD hard drive. There's nothing wrong with the original, I just want a backup. Can't beat that reliability.
I have a wd. Green 2tb since 2012 no bad sectors quite as a mouse and under constant heavy load
@@joemerino3243 True. I steered away from them years ago when my first harddrive from them starting making noise less than 2 years after I bought it.
There was a video online that was discussing harddrive reliability, and Seagate was the worst. Had tons of data behind it. Makes me believe this laser HD will probably last less than a year.
As someone who has built many computers, I have never ever in my entire usage of Seagate (or Maxtor in the old times) encountered any of them break, I still own an external one which is been working 13 years. In my experience WD are the worst drives I have ever encountered. Much slower when they're half way full, and break more often.
Are you 20yrs old ?
I'm still running 8 X 2Tb Seagate drives from 2015....🤪
I was a little confused by the 32gb Thumbnail :)
it's supposedly fixed now.
2:50 good. Tried of these Chinese tech brands. Not a good sign for future
Transparent TV? So now I can watch a movie AND my wall at the same time?
Explaining to dogs, quite NVIDIA
Man, I love your videos and the info you provide. Have you ever considered making shorts of each of these sections? It should be easier to share with friends
You can use the clip feature to select and send a specific part of a video, but yes I've actually thought of shorts. Still not sure how I could make it would work, but maybe soon! :)
Just hit share with a timestamp
@@TheFridayCheckout Wouldn't it be possible to just cut smaller clips from the episodes (i.e. the release monitor section or individual stories from the main section) and adjust the layout for shorts by including you in front of the camera as well as the on screen info on top of each other? Basically not having to change anything besides the layout?
I think this format works just as well as a long video as it does as segmented into several shorts.
storage definitely won't bother us in the future like 2tb CDs, cheap 36tb hdds
the only hinderence would be speed
CDs? What’s next 1PB floppy discs?
The hard disk manufacturers really can't think of anything better than squeezing ever higher capacities into 3.5 inch housings and leaving everything else as it is. No (new) SSHDs, no HHDs with more than one actuator (higher speed and IOPS) and no support for NVMe 2.0.
i love this little rapid-fire end of week recap! look forward to it each time. happy holidays / happy new year tech altar guy!
I'd love it if maybe we'd get S-ATA 4 at some point... And if not, maybe consumer boards and drives that support SAS4
all well and good that we now have 32tb HDDs, but if their data interface keeps being so slow what's the point? Much more relevant for consumer ssds of course, but we're nevertheless already approaching that limit on HDDs, too. I see no reason why the only actually fast consumer ssds all have to use nvme
They'll probably use U.2 instead of SATA.
U2 is basically NVMe but with a wired connector instead of the M2 slot we are used to. NVMe is more of an open standard and uses PCIe.
@@thekakan Yeah, but consumer CPUs don't have the amount of PCIe lanes required for having 5-6 drives + 1 GPU + 1 other expansion card, unless we get something like a trimode hba card, and then we're back at where we're already at.
I also wish there were better cables for U.2 drives... My current boot drive is U.2 and my motherboard didn't have an Oculink connector and no open M.2 slots for an M.2=>Oculink adapter, so now my U.2 boot drive awkwardly sits in a PCIe x8 -> U.2 carrier card... And even if the motherboard had Oculink connectors, they don't come with power, so it's always an awkward cable with Sata-power and Oculink on one end and U.2 on the other...
Personally I'd love it if we just had SAS-4 for consumer drives, with proper cables and a proper SAS-4 controller embedded on the mainboard.
Price man where is price?!!!
It's a shame the hard drive will likely be insanely expensive. if consumer drives had that tech for a reasonabe price it would be groundbreaking.
Time capsule it idiotic. The whole point of airtags are that its tiny. If you want something better just get a rechargable via USB-c card which is super slim as well.
SSDs are on the rise, makes sense to not bring it for consumers right away.
might eventually happen in the future tho.
@@farhanrejwan Give it time. 16TB nearly halved in priced where I live since last year.
@@penumbrum3135 yes i know, that's why i said it might eventually happen. and it can't 'happen' without the price dropping too.
CDs and DVDs to Seagate: Years of research and development and where did it lead you? Back to us.
why does thumbnail has 32 "GB" instead of 32 "TB" ??
it's fixed now.
Honestly, considering the FCC's rip&replace program for Huawei and ZTE is still under 20% done, you might as well make the TP Link ban only apply for consumer and military. Seems like US companies, even internet service providers, will just use banned equipment forever unless it breaks down or they get a fat enough check for replacing the stuff.
Hey thank you guys for your work
This has been my go to Tech channel for the year
1:29 - how is SMR a "competing technology"?
Say what you want about spinning rust but having 12TB of dirt-cheap storage (paid just $100 each for 2 6TB drives) so that I can have my entire DVD collection along with my entire music library along with recording all my gameplay footage? Really enjoying that. Also great for my single player games where I don't need NVME speeds, all the classic games like the Bioshock series and all my boomer shooters really don't benefit from being on NVME so having all my favorite games ready to go when I have the urge to play them is quite nice.
2:50 spies,spies everywhere.🕶🔎
Steam Machines are coming back!!!! LESGOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!
Do we have alternatives to tp link?
Do you really think that tp-link is the only brand there??
most of the world is missing out on the Fritz!Box routers. Incredible software and great hardware. I don't get why they don't market those world-wide. yet. maybe.
If Nintendo does not reinvent. This might be their last year of generations Console.
TP-Link needs to be Programmable to OpenWRT
Great, now make it as fast as an ssd
this time around the release monitor should have been called the expensive monitor 😭
they're still mechanical, and that's still the major issue to invest and improve
Ok now convince me to actually buy a seagate drive
your thumbnail read "32GB" not TB
I thought, hey there might be a new friday checkout. there was
As long as you dont use ditect x there is no need to optimize for linux. Vulkan or opengl aready make Godot multiplatform, but like anything you need to compile it for the target os anyway.
The issue isn't compatibility, Linux has been compatible to games. The problem is economic incentives to keep it working. Compiling for Linux like Windows introduces problems that cost to solve and so that's why Linux isn't natively supported
32 GB was a real bummer
32 gig flash drive in a hard drive in 2025. AMAZEBALLS. I now can store 4 DVDs on it.
If the read/write/seek speeds don’t increase with capacity of a hardware. It slowly becomes only good for colder type of storage.
When used in large arrays performance isn't the issue and moving to these high capacity drives could reduce power and cooling requirements for large datacenters.
@ yes, I understand that. It just takes sooo long to load data onto the drives.
Sir u r doing awesome work.
Another storage breakthrough, love it.
Looking forward to the live show… This is by far my favorite tech channel. #LoveTheFridayCheckOut.❤
Sure.. 'cat pictures'....those multi terabyte animated cat GIFs.
Happy friday and merry Christmas! 🎅🏻
I thought Waymo didn't work well in snow or heavy rain because it produces tons of noise on the lidar sensors? They aren't even allowed in snowy or rainy US states yet, but Japan wants to risk it?
rollable screen could be good when screen will be 4:3 and its rolls to side
Is that Ericsson associated with 5G a Sony company? I just wonder because Sony does make a lot of smartphones. They would be their Xperia product line and there must be a ton of different models that came along over the years by now. I am quite pleased with the level of detail in photos from my Xperia 1. The only time they come out bad is if the lighting is awful or there is a smudge over the camera lenses causing a streak or blur. Sometimes the exposure is not optimal but this one does predictive capturing behind the scenes silently snapping a couple of different photos you can chose from with different shutter timing and stuff. Those ones show in the gallery with a small icon in their corner denoting that the photo is one of those. It does not always do that but instead when it thinks it could have done better.
No. Like Nokia, Ericsson has spun off their mobile phone manufacturing and now focus on networking hardware.
Waiting for the right solution for home routers, your router gets hacked and your government bricks your router before the hackers steal your life savings.
Tp link in Danger❌
Tp link is Danger✅
pretty sure you used a tp-link router to post this comment 😂
@@farhanrejwan I don't know about him, but sure as heck I did😁
@@Dac_DT_MKD I even bought one for my quest 3, exactly today....
too much storage? never
every router has been used in a bot net. from the best expensive to the cheapest.
SMR drives, oof. Unless this tech addresses the shortcomings of shingled HDDs it's still a hard sell
Based Steam killing Windows as the default gamer operating system.
If this continues I'm going to switch because windows is not only bloated but full of Spyware
When did the Friday Checkout become the Billionaire's checkout :p
Blackmagic making a camera for apple vision pro when apple halted production of the units :(
What interface does HAMR use?
You mean the one that connects the drive to the PC? Since it's for the data center, it'll likely be using SAS.
intel: Performance cost? Performance gain?
Now let's see the drive fail in 4 months, Seagate style.
Another Friday with another innovations
Photonic lasers? really, what other kind of laser there is? All lasers including Masers use photons. These drives are not good for customers with rebuild times in the days, but they are useful to hyperscalers that can have massive redundancy and still save money vs SSDs. Even so, HDD already lost in duration, density and anytime price
Next year will be awesome for portable consoles. Probably the final consolidation of Linux/Windows handhelds, specially considering the low energy consumption of this generation of processors. And probably the Nintendo Switch 2 (at this point I coundn't care less about it, but it wil be huge)
Seagate failure rate is still too high.
Seagate....mindblowing tech! 🎉
But that's not the first transparent OLED🤔
write & read speed? are they improved
so... will that new hard drives also work years and years and years? like old hard drives and not like ssds
Hard drive in these days is not a good choice and a high density HDD if it took a small hit the data loss will catastrophic.
32TB? Hmm, not sure if that’s enough.
what a tech review, feels like 2012!
What do you think he should change?
The floppy disk returns 🥺❤️
According to Seagate's product page the new 32TB drives are SMR. Does anyone know if for Raid use are they host managed, drive managed or Host aware?
If Valve takes gaming with Linux, Windows for private use is becoming really unattractive.
Wow... A laser that uses photons of light. What will the the marketing dept. think of next 🙄
It doesnt matter. Just that ''screech, click, screech'' sound is enough to put you off, let alone caring where that darn needle is gonna land in case of a blackout.
Big discs are back baby! Eat it m2 sff
Unless Seagate managed to drastically increase the performance of these new hard-drives, they'll basically be completely useless.
Not really. Read write speed isn't important if your priority is price-per-Gigabyte.
Higher capacity SSDs are still expensive. And when your use case is not speed limited, it can be extremely cost effective to buy hard drives and install them in a redundancy array for the sake of data backups.
wow 32GB 💀
So Seagate's next generation Hard Disk Drives (HDD) will have read and write as fast or maybe even faster than Solid-state Drives (SSD) than the previous generations' HDDs ?
5 years from now videogames will require 500GB space and will still be boring
Is the family OK in Syria
Thankfully yes!
I think valve is gonna become evil
Im never going to buy seagate again. These hard drives always fail. Whenever i see a seagate lying around I always assume its dead and I would be correct
Great news! Let me know when Samsung reinvents the SSD and we finally get some 48TB SSDs that consumer can afford they promised many years ago when they announced the 3D storage drives.
32TB. Damn. Seagate still kicking good.
TP-link is like the Temu version of D-Link.
let me... let me... create a 'proper' grimace for my next video, lol (just stop it, imo)
Didn't trump want to ban tik tok, but then they gave him money (or something) and then he was all for them? I'm going to guess that if they offer him enough the ban goes away.
TB are the new GB
But laser
Frickin' laser beams!
Can anyone recommend other brands to replace tp link
Who's Tristan?
Viable Linux gaming by 2030?
8K$ casio? Does anyone spend more than 200€ on casio? What am i missing?