
A Toshiba exec says, opposite to the view of Pure Storage, disk drives have a long-ranging future in addition to clear and sustainable benefits over SSDs.
Famously, Pure Storage CEO Charlie Giancarlo stated in June: “The times of onerous disks are coming to an finish – we predict that there might be no new onerous disks bought in 5 years.”

Rainer Kaese, senior supervisor, HDD Enterprise Growth at Toshiba Electronics Europe GmbH, begs to vary. He says that at current, “HDDs preserve a niche in value per capability with flash storage of round an element of seven. This benefit stays the lifeline of the HDD … HDDs might attain 40 and even 50 terabytes with out approaching comparable prices with flash storage.” That’s as a result of extra capability could be added to onerous drives with out rising their manufacturing value a lot. Subsequently, value/TB goes down.
The necessity for extra capability is a given, Kaese says. “This market driver is a certainty. Even when HDDs reached as excessive as 100 terabytes of capability, our data-driven society means we might fill it very quickly in any respect.” Air-filled drives want about 10 watts to spin whereas helium-filled ones want 7-8 watts. He reckons “datacenter engineers are excited about methods to use the HDD in a extra power-optimised manner, presumably by idle or power-down modes.”
Combining HDDs can ship excessive streaming efficiency. He says Toshiba has developed a “high-capacity top-loading JBOD enclosure with 78 x 18 TB HDDs, giving a complete capability of 1.4 petabytes, which is related to a server … With all 78 HDDs energetic, the efficiency is rated at virtually 17 GBps.”
HDDs are extra recyclable than SSDs. He writes: “The primary wave of HDD deployments in information centres for the cloud happened six or seven years in the past, and people elements at the moment are coming to the top of their lifecycle and are being decommissioned. HDDs are comprised of aluminium and copper, making them a lot simpler to recycle than different elements and supplies akin to PCBs, chips, and plastics. Consequently, we anticipate HDDs to change into an integral a part of the round economic system primarily based on providers akin to recycling and reuse.”
He says European GDPR constraints can favor HDDs over SSDs. For instance: “Traditionally, if there’s a requirement for a storage aspect contained in the digital camera itself, this has usually been a flash part, whereas the central recorder typically includes a number of HDDs.
“In sure components of the world, akin to central Europe, the place GDPR necessities imply solely a small quantity of recording could be retained for a brief interval, system distributors might think about a low-capacity SSD for that central storage too – as that small capability means it achieves value parity with HDD in particular situations.
“Nonetheless, such a setup doesn’t overcome the challenges of write-intensive operations. Excessive over-ride cycles the place information can solely be stored for just a few days would rapidly put on out a flash part. There are not any such constraints for HDDs.”
Their contents could be rewritten many times not like SSDs, which have restricted write cycle endurance.
In Kaese’s view: “It’s clear that HDDs do have a brilliant future.”
