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Comment Re:Being punished for opinions? (Score 1) 16

All these reports are simply opinions. Having an opinion, even for sale, is not an actionable item.

You could say that about credit reports too. They're just someone's opinion of how credit worthy you are.

Practically speaking, that ship has sailed. We've already collectively decided if someone is collecting data and making a decisions which can have profound effects on someone, that someone has a legal right to see what data went into that decision. However, the law as written may or may not apply to AI because AI wasn't a thing at the time. If it doesn't, IMHO, that's a job for Congress or the California legislature to address. I'd prefer they explicitly added AI and other algorithms to the legislation rather than having a court invent a legal right.

Bear in mind, I am not a lawyer and I haven't read the relevant legislation and case law. I have absolutely no idea how a court will decide. I doubt many of us here do either. Case law especially is very complicated so be cautious with what you think you know.

Comment And there's headroom (Score 5, Informative) 87

I didn't read TFA, I just started some back of the envelope math. I was wondering what you build this thing out of and what material has a tensile strength to weigh ratio to hold anything at 2,000 g's. Turns out carbon fiber can easily do it.

Assuming I have a 1m high strength carbon fiber rod with a cross section of 1 cm^2, that's 100 cm^3. According to the Googles, carbon fiber has a density of about 1.6 g/cm^3 so the whole rod has a mass of 160g.

Also according to the Googles, an ultra-strong version of this rod will hold up something like 70,000 kg (!). Even allowing for a hefty safety margin, the rod can hold over 40,000 times it's own weight, well above what this new centrifuge needs.

That's crazy. I knew carbon fiber was strong and light but had no idea it was that strong.

Comment Re:Surprised the market is still as large as it is (Score 0) 43

Why are you surprised? If you think a 1TB SSD is "enough space", you should remember before SSDs took over multi-TB hard drives were common in computers.

In the consumer space, I think the vast majority of systems are laptops with less than a TB of local storage. The number of systems which had multi-TB is a small slice of the market, probably just gamers and media creators. That's why I'm surprised: I wouldn't think there were enough of them to buy 150 million units.

Maybe I shouldn't be. How many professional photographers and videographers can there be? Tens of millions? Probably not 100 million.

People have a lot of stuff.

Right. But how many casual creators keep that locally versus beaming it to a cloud? Not the ones I know, which is admittedly a small slice.

That's the thing. You personally might have an enormous home storage footprint. I'd be hesitant to extrapolate from that. People who hang out in /. and other nerd forums tend to be weird outliers in many ways.

Comment Re:Surprised the market is still as large as it is (Score 1) 43

HDDs are still the most cost effective solution for large storage arrays

I beg to differ. In the enterprise space, "large" arrays are measured in petabytes and they all use SSDs now. I don't think you can buy a primary storage array which still supports HDD. Even the small enterprise arrays, tens to hundreds of TB, are exclusively SSDs.

...although putting an SSD in front of the drive array to act as a cache can make even some of those workloads viable.

That was popular 15 to 5 years ago. Last I looked, SSDs and NVMe devices had gotten large and cheap enough to entirely replace HDDs except for limited applications. Well, maybe not "entirely" but for huge swaths of the market. At least, that was my impression. Given the sales numbers, I wonder if I'm wrong.

All that's in the enterprise/data center space. I have very little insight into the SOHO market and what happens on deskside systems. That was a different part of the company.

Comment Re:Surprised the market is still as large as it is (Score 1) 43

At low enough demand, you are on the floor where you might as well do SSD, and in many applications the SSD performance is worth it, but if you need capacity and not too picky about performance, then HDD still wins in cost effectiveness by a wide margin.

That's the thing. My impression was the class of applications where a SSD wasn't appropriate had shrunk to just backup and archive storage.

Comment Re:Trains solve everything (Score 1) 171

Like the person said, look to Japan. Here's what we have in Tokyo

Right. I was differentiating between trains and subways/light rail/street cars. I don't know if that distinction makes much of a difference and I don't know if that's what the OP had in mind.

In the US, the two mean quite different things and are used for very different purposes. I think that's true world wide but don't know for sure.

Comment Re:Surprised the market is still as large as it is (Score 1) 43

You either want fast storage or you want slow. And honestly, hard drives are too fast and too expensive to be slow storage.

Not really. What you want is fast (for streaming writes) and cheap per byte. What you can buy is slow and cheap or fast and expensive. No one actually wants slow devices, that's just what they settle for.

And it turns out with very clever software and careful hardware design, you can make many slow disks pretty fast.

Comment Surprised the market is still as large as it is (Score 4, Interesting) 43

I used to work for an enterprise storage company making secondary storage devices (that is, destinations for backups). High capacity and low cost were the selling points (and write performance and reliability, but those don't figure in here).

For the last 15 years, the shift in the enterprise storage industry has been to SSDs for everything, just like for home use. Around the coffee machine, we talked about how secondary storage was the last industry segment which still used spinning rust. Last I checked, even that division was selling purely SDD based systems.

I checked some HDD market stats. Apparently something like 150 million units shipped last year, compared to a peak of around 600 million in 2010. I'm surprised there's even that much of a market for HDDs left.

Comment Re:counter for why production hasn't increased (Score 3, Interesting) 43

A great counter for why production hasn't increased (spoiler: because the manufactures got burnt before).

No doubt. Back in the day, the HDD market was notorious for booms, busts, and profit margins thinner than the oxide layer on the platters.

Supply has also got to be tight. Manufacturers are going to tightly plan production to keep costs in line, thus making it hard to rapidly ramp up production. In those circumstances, even a small shift in demand can lead to large jumps in price.

Comment Re:Trains solve everything (Score 1) 171

Look to Japan.

Trains may work for city to city transit. They're not so great getting people from point A to point B in an urban center. Even light rail isn't great in terms of coverage. It's really a backbone which needs surface transit to fill in the last few miles.

I haven't been to Japan but every city I've been in with a subway also has busses and/or taxis.

Comment Re:We need a different paradigm (Score 1) 171

The US needs a different transportation paradigm. We keep expanding laterally, which simply makes the problem worse. It's not going to get better this way.

With talks of alternate energy science, this could be within our grasp, but it would be a very big fundamental change.

I'd be happy with just converting from full sized busses to twice as many 15-seat passenger vans. Driver salary may make that cost prohibitive today. If we could make busses autonomous, then we'd be on to something.

As you say, you could just make this autonomous Uber Pool: when you whistle up a bus, you put in your destination and some clever route planning software could group riders. One could even imagine a range of vehicle sizes, from single seat to 45, depending on demand.

Comment Re:That's because: (Score 1) 197

While the Linux UI has been good for a decade and great for a few years...

I guess I'd have to see a demo. Every time I've tried it, Linux GUIs look amateurish compared to macOS and Windows.

Thing is, from the summaries, Linux ain't there yet. The summary of the summaries was "yeah, then I had to do this annoying workaround which would flummox any non-techie and everything was great!" Do hear echoes of Jerry Pournelle and Chaos Manor?

  "Looks worse and harder to use" isn't a great sales pitch.

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