On Thu, 2019-10-10 at 07:03 -0400, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> SSDs haven't been around long enough, I feel, for their claimed
> longevity to be proven.

While that is true, it is hard to predict future performance of a new
product.

> And no matter what it is, SSDs have a ticking clock, counting down
> towards failure. I just have a conceptual problem with hardware
> that's guaranteed to fail at some point. There's no expiration date
> on regular HDDs.

That's not true.  Look at the warrantee period for a HDD, that's as
much trust in the product as the manufacturer has.  Not very long.

I've had drives running for 20 years, and nary a problem.  I've had
others go bung really quickly, getting unreadable sectors, or their own
generated heat is enough to make them erratic.  I've got some old
drives that began to not want to start up.  I had to tap on them to get
them to spin up, sometimes harder than I care to do.  And you have the
greenie drives that want to spin down all the time, getting worn out by
spinning and up and down far too often.
 
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