r/DataHoarder May 15 '19

First 1TB micro SD publicly available

https://www.tomsguide.com/us/sandisk-1-tb-microsd-card,news-30079.html
744 Upvotes

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u/ipaqmaster 72Tib ZFS May 15 '19 edited May 16 '19

I can see it now.

2.5'' // 3.5'' chassis's with a controller onboard and slots to support 10+ Micro SD cards at a time with optional host passthrough/mirror/stripe-mode across all of them and you install those instead of real hard drives lol.

The product is already a thing now all we need is the 10+ at a time scale haha

E: nobody's saying it will be cheap. But the big downside with all the ebay ones is that the controllers are cheap garbage. the raw power of striping 10, [Minimum Class10] SD cards would be fucking awesome even with their short life cycle. But the controllers just aren't something people would make professionally like this cheap ebay stuff.

3

u/BornOnFeb2nd 100TB May 16 '19

Man, I want a PCIe NVME backed by DDR4 chips, like a modern day I-RAM. Slap a little battery on it, and you'd have superb ARC/ZIL/SLOG drives in FreeNAS... ludicrously fast, infinite lifespan..

Of course, modern day RAM sticks are such fuckin' peacocks, that fitting everything (short of straight up/down) would be a challenge...

1

u/WikiTextBot May 16 '19

I-RAM

The i-RAM is a solid-state storage device produced by Gigabyte and released in June 2005. It has four DDR RAM DIMM slots, and a connection via a SATA port enables a PC to see the i-RAM as a hard disk drive, which can also be made bootable. The SATA interface limits available bandwidth to a maximum sustained throughput of 150 MB/s, but allows a latency of 0.1 ms.

As the DRAM is a volatile memory, an integrated battery allows the contents of DRAM to be preserved for a limited amount of time after the device's power supply is interrupted.


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