I'm one of the few users left in the world who are still staying on HDD technology.
Reasons? Let's see...
Still significantly cheaper than SSDs
Way bigger capacities than SSDs at the same price
No read-write lifespan nonsense. As someone who has remapped the 'rm' command in Linux to 'shred -n 1000000', i can kill an SSD in months under normal usage.
Performance of Linux on HDD is comparable to Windows 10 on an SSD.
I'm one of the few users left in the world who are still staying on HDD technology.
Reasons? Let's see...
Still significantly cheaper than SSDs
Way bigger capacities than SSDs at the same price
No read-write lifespan nonsense. As someone who has remapped the 'rm' command in Linux to 'shred -n 1000000', i can kill an SSD in months under normal usage.
Performance of Linux on HDD is comparable to Windows 10 on an SSD.
I have two laptops. One running the standard HDD, another upgraded to a SSD. Ironically, it's my 11-year-old laptop that got the SSD. She boots up pretty fast, but she's only running WinXP due to her limited processing power.
Works great as a legacy device for old software that isn't supported on newer OS.
I'm one of the few users left in the world who are still staying on HDD technology.
Reasons? Let's see...
Still significantly cheaper than SSDs
Way bigger capacities than SSDs at the same price
No read-write lifespan nonsense. As someone who has remapped the 'rm' command in Linux to 'shred -n 1000000', i can kill an SSD in months under normal usage.
Performance of Linux on HDD is comparable to Windows 10 on an SSD.
I still use HDD, more dependable imo.
Hmm...
Can't really tell.
I think it boots up a little faster now too.Excuse me. I'll take this SSD, please.