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For the moment, Hitachi and Western Digital's highest-capacity desktop hard drives top out at 1TB--the Hitachi Ultrastor AK71000 and the Western Digital Caviar Black WD1001FALS--both of which share similar specs with the Barracuda 7200.11 series (other than Seagate's 1.5TB capacity, of course).|
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1.5TB is a lot of bytes! Recently the outrageously-fast Velociraptor was introduced, and now this hard drive arrives with an unbelievably-large amount of space. But I believe we are witnessing the end of the mechanical storage device...their last-hurrah. SSD's are on the horizon, and it is not about how big you are - it is about how fast you can go!
I beleive we still are going to be using the mechanical drives for at least a year longer before the SSD,s capacity and price point makes it worthwhile to make the change. Probably will be mix and match using both at first. But I looking forward to the speed and capacity not to mention the durability!
I think most people will mostly stay with mechanical drives for a while yet. SSD drives are very fast in most areas, but are severely limited on size and price. That size and price limit will cause most mainstream people to stick with the far cheaper and larger mechanical drives, which are more than fast enough for their needs.
As for the power users, I agree with amdcrankitup. Your going to see most stick with mechanical drives for the next year or so, then begin drifting to a mix and match of SSD and mechanical for at least the next year or two.
Only when the price of SSD drives comes down far enough that they are only a reasonable premium over mechanical drives for the same size will they become start to become the main drive.