Where are the 16 TB M.2 SSDs?

From exactly a year ago… “16TB M.2 SSDs will soon grace the market”:

Where are these storage devices? Or is a full calendar year not “soon” in the moribund computer components industry?

14 thoughts on “Where are the 16 TB M.2 SSDs?

  1. SSD would be nice, but I just bought a couple of 24TB HDD’s for $250 each. When I was a child, I saw a 20MB drive pack for an IBM360 that was in use, not a museum piece. When I was a teenager I saved up my beans to buy a 40MB hard drive for my 386, I think it was just around $400. Then in the mid-90’s I bought one of the first desktop 1GB hard drives, I think again for $400. So, being able to get 24TB today for less than the cost of a nice dinner for two blows my mind.

    The hard drive folks still seem to keep moving forward.

    • You can use up 24TB if you are a moderately active photographer and you want to archive all your pictures in raw format.

    • Daniel: I agree that the hard drive folks are actually advancing in price/performance faster than the chip nerds.

      Doubters: I think 24 TB is a good size drive for someone who captures a reasonable amount of video on his/her/zit/their phone. Tough to fill up even with RAW still images, but video is a disk space hog.

    • That’s the thing, Dr. Greenspun. In order to justify buying a 24 TB S/HDD, I will have to buy a camera and take photos. In order to save the photos from the camera I buy, I will have to get a 24 TB HDD, this gets me all confused.

  2. Guess we need thank Apple for creating nominally Taiwan but really China – based computer component monopolist, per your recent post. Apple’s high margins and super-profits come first, you know. “think different, act lame”

  3. There’s the 30TB Micron 9400, for only a month of rent. Important reminder to back up our porn.

  4. I wonder: if we could tap into every storage device ever created since the age of computer storage, how much of the stored data would turn out to be redundant duplicates, corrupted and unusable, or simply obsolete and no longer valuable (like outdated application logs)? I wouldn’t be surprised if half or even more of it could be safely discarded.

    I know, I am guilty of this too. I have backups of backups, plus data stored on old 5 1/4-inch floppy disks that I cannot even access anymore. I even have a stack of Zip disks — anyone else remember those?

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