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by guenthert
2131 days ago
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Today reliability is sufficient that one can meet a given data availability goal by replicating the data 2, 3, 4, 5, <whatever> times as there is only once in a blue moon a bad batch of drives when they tried out a new bearing lubricant or so. But what if the economic incentives decline, the marked breaks apart (as it arguably does), much like it happened for floppy disks once they were (perceived as) obsolete and used only in fringe application (HP logic analyzers come to mind, but also Boing airplanes). Is there not the danger that the quality drops drastically to the point that one would need an unreasonable number of copies? |
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Unless you have an uptime bug in the firmware where all your drives die at once:
* https://www.zdnet.com/article/hpe-tells-users-to-patch-ssds-...