• Etterra@discuss.online
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    7 hours ago

    Why would you not want to sell things to people? I mean isn’t Toshiba a Japanese company? I understand why the Chinese are like that, but Toshiba?

    • Chakravanti@monero.town
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      5 hours ago

      Because they’re not buying them. This is nothing more than statistical observation and some asshole is reporting it technically accurate but failure to fully describe the subject in hand. Thus portraying it as some kind of personal shit chosen by the opposite relevancy instead of the fact that they just don’t sell shit to people who don’t buy shit.

      If you had any difficulty reading what I wrote then you should have a good picture of exactly what the fuck I’m talking about.

  • lazynooblet@lazysoci.al
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    8 hours ago

    I find 22T to be perfect. When formatted it is just a little over 20T making a satisfying total size round number.

    • wewbull@feddit.uk
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      2 hours ago

      It’s not formatting losses. It’s different units.

      22TB = 20.009 TiB

      Long ago, storage manufacturers stopped selling their drives in sizes based on powers of two, and started using powers of ten because it makes the drives sound larger.

      The argument was that SI prefixes denote power of ten and so therefore it was a correction despite decades of computing history using powers of 2 for storage. As a result the KiB, MiB, GiB, etc were brought in to denote power of two based sizes.

      Note that 64GB of RAM is still 64×2³⁰ bytes of RAM which kinda blows that argument out of the water.

      • Zanz@lemmy.ml
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        15 minutes ago

        Iso recognizes with no i as base 2 for all memory including hdd. You can also put a disclaimer that the stupid unit with an i is actually in based 10 in the EU and U.S.

    • thatKamGuy@sh.itjust.works
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      8 hours ago

      I’m legitimately a weirdo and only like my drive capacities to be in base 2; 2TB > 4 TB > 8TB > 16TB… I god I be waiting a long time before my next wholesale NAS upgrade!

  • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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    14 hours ago

    Given that both of Toshiba’s rivals readily offer their highest capacity products in Europe, it is hard to imagine that there is no demand for 24TB NAS-oriented HDDs in the region.

    I don’t look to buy Toshiba drives anyway, so moving on…

  • anamethatisnt@sopuli.xyz
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    14 hours ago

    Keeping an eye on the 20TB+ pool. The 24TB Seagate (model ST24000NM002H) no longer has a perfect record, with eight failures for the quarter. Still, the drives put up a respectable 1.11% AFR. Meanwhile, the 20TB+ drives as a pool are averaging a 0.72% AFR, coming in lower than the overall failure rates—always a promising sign.

    I have no trouble buying Seagate Exos, their stats look good so far.

      • jonesy@aussie.zone
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        8 hours ago

        About 6 drives in my NAS are Seagate, but they are specifically models I found Backblaze reported as reliable. I wouldn’t have an issue recommending a good, new Seagate drive, as long as it has an acceptably low failure rate.

      • anamethatisnt@sopuli.xyz
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        9 hours ago

        If you browse Backblaze statistics you will find that all brands are reliable nowadays. At least if you go for the datacentre brands (such as Seagate Exos).

        Regarding NAS I historically enjoyed Synology but they’re currently aiming to start forcing you to pay 2x the normal amount to use their own branded drives.
        Personally I built a Debian m-itx server for my fileserver (and other server) needs.

        edit: 2024 stats

  • NoSpotOfGround@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Toshiba may also attempt to ship as many high-end HDDs to its American stock as possible before country-specific tariffs kick in this July to grab some extra market share.

    Interesting. So prices and availability might change dramatically worldwide in/after July.