Seagate 'Exploring' Possible New Line of Crypto-Specific Hard Drives (techradar.com) 47
In a Q&A with TechRadar, storage hardware giant Seagate revealed it is keeping a close eye on the crypto space, with a view to potentially launching a new line of purpose-built drives. From the report: Asked whether companies might develop storage products specifically for cryptocurrency use cases, Jason M. Feist, who heads up Seagate's emerging products arm, said it was a "possibility." Feist said he could offer no concrete information at this stage, but did suggest the company is "exploring this opportunity and imagines others may be as well."
Why stop there? (Score:2, Interesting)
Why not jump to the chase and just find a way to vaporize resources or convert precious metals into collectable beanie babies.
Just spitballing here. I'll let the worthless speculators decide how to pointlessly squander resources which could otherwise provide some value other than as an elaborate gambling ring?
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Why not jump to the chase and just find a way to vaporize resources or convert precious metals into collectable beanie babies.
I’m concerned about inflation too, but I’m converting fiat currency into traditional precious metals.
Whatever stops ... (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:Whatever stops ... (Score:5, Informative)
Never heard of Chia, then? IT's the next big thing in cryptocurrencies and instead of wasting CPU cycles, it wastes disk space.
It's resulted in shortages of large hard drives and SSDs. 18TB+ enterprise drives are unobtainium because people are snapping them up along with 2/4/8TB SSDs.
The buyouts are slowly making it down the list, so if you want to buy a 10TB disk, better get it quick. They haven't snapped up the consumer level drives yet, but it's only a matter of time.
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Never heard of Chia, then?
It would seem that the GP was talking directly about Chia.
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Great, another color of hard drive to deal with (Score:2)
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Wonder what color crypto drives will be with green already taken?
Puke green.
Re: Great, another color of hard drive to deal wit (Score:2)
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Gold, as in digital. Obviously.
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Crypto + Hard drives implies encryption (Score:1)
If you are talking about cryptocurrency in a context or environment that regularly uses encryption is it too much to ask that you say cryptocurrency?
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This. I think a few too many business douches who have no idea that "crypto" is short for "encryption" suddenly discovered cryptocurrency and are now flaunting it to make themselves sound knowledgeable about something in tech.
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Relevant tweet: (Score:5, Funny)
@NanoRaptor [twitter.com]
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That will be interesting if it happens.
I understand substantial parts of the US don't have decent broadband.
Maybe your ISPs will come up with a "crypto plan" and charge you triple the amount if you plan to use it for earning crypto coins.
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Initial specs ... (Score:1)
They'll be designed to use (at least) double the power with no real purpose or reason -- maybe with a heating element with the platters used as a cooling fan. They'll also be loud and make lots of clicking noises so people will know you have them.
What's more important, speed or capacity ? (Score:2)
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Chia mining as two steps.
1. Generating "plots". This fills the drives with hash tables or something like that. It is rather CPU and I/O intensive, requiring 15K drives or SSDs with high endurance ratings (ro generate a ~100GB plot, the software issues about 1TB of writes to the temp storage, which usually is SSD).
2. "Farming" those plots. Basically the software gets a "challenge" and looks over its stored plots to see if one matches. This step is read-only and generates very little I/O, but there are some l
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I have a RAM drive (they call it an SSD - because it was solid state). It fit in a 5.25" drive bay and had 8 DDR2 RAM slots. It also had a battery and a h
Will such a drive be more about reliability? (Score:2)
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A purpose-built drive for chia would be a cheap, high-capacity SMR, 3600RPM.
When the plotting is done, the drive is only read from and frequently (so I would set it to not spin down or park its heads), but very little at a time, maybe a few MB per minute. Read speed is not important, as long as the drive can read the required sectors in 30 seconds (which is almost doable with a tape). 3600RPM would mean lower power consumption.
Mission: Impossible (Score:2)
How about adding a physical "write enable" jumper (Score:4, Insightful)
so I can read backup drives with confidence that the ransomware on my system isn't going to encrypt it.
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PROTIP for that, VeraCrypt (the continuation of TrueCrypt) has a "mount read only" option. Encrypt the entire partition, don't use a file container as malware an encrypt that.
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Software solutions remain hackable. Physical switches cannot be hacked.
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Well you can't have a physical switch for SATA or USB so... At best you can have something with firmware that modifies commands on the fly, but that would likely be hackable.
opportunities for advances in storage tech? (Score:1)
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Smells Like A Con To Me (Score:2)
Here are some of the "tells" I spotted in the Tom's Hardware article that tell me that it's a scam... see if you can spot more:-
1. Dubious Article Publication Date
If you look at the top of the article, you'll see that Tom's claim, "First Published 1 week ago". Then, between the 3rd and 4th paragraphs, you'll see an added comment from the editorial team that reads
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Linus Tech Tips tested out a similar coin that uses storage as the stake. It did not go well.
https://youtu.be/nJ4ea5NNqcg [youtu.be]
Even with thousands of USD of storage the earnings were a fraction of cost of the electricity needed to keep it online, let alone the price of the actual storage.
Re: Smells Like A Con To Me (Score:1)
F*ck that... (Score:2)
....show us the real stuff.
Like true multi-head (per surface), multi-actuator drive.
Those will offer great redundancy and with all heads being capable of simultaneous r/W on their track on the same cylinder, pretty spectacular transfer speeds.
Cryptography? (Score:1)