You have a 128GB *Write Once* Drive, what are you putting on it?
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/verbatim-write-once-ssd
Interesting product. I can see it being used for regulatory / archival purposes. If you had 24 hours to fill it up with data, what would you put on it if it's guaranteed to last at least 10 years?
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I'd put my previous po - ./......
Ehm, unix iso.
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It could be useful as a logging device if it had an erase feature that couldn't be activated through the normal computer port. I've sometimes wanted something like that for audit purposes.
I too have an extensive... erm... unix iso collection that i would store for posterity
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im selling it to get a cheaper flash drive 🤭
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Invalid answer. Your drive has been filled with 12,345 Shrek memes and you are required to view the complete slideshow with your family in exactly 10 years.
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Dump RAM to it :P
I'm selling it to pay renewals on HostHatch and PulsedMedia storage accounts.
One SSD won't survive a fire or theft.
Two storage accounts would, especially if they have disjoint sets of SSH keys.
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anything related to LAW , GDPR , Audit logs, Embassy, Library, facts etc ....
I think that the following comment on that page (by the moderator USAFRet) makes sense:
"A single swap file or partition may be up to 128 MB in size. [...] [I]f you need 256 MB of swap, you can create two 128-MB swap partitions." (M. Welsh & L. Kaufman, Running Linux, 2e, 1996, p. 49)
FreeBDSM ISOs.
Yeah, totally! I don't see many use cases that would make this marketable to the average consumer. Just am curious how creative y'all are and what would be deemed "worthy" of saving for 10+ years without modification.
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I have some document management items and some family photos.
Surely same use as a CDROM with the exception of speed and capacity.
So my answer would be the videos and photos I made of my parents (both dead now). I already have backups on multiple providers however this sort of thing is private. Also having this sort of device would make me feel that in an emergency I know I still have everything.
It also means that it would be easier for other generations to use rather than using my cloud providers.
This is good for cold storage of family pictures and videos, as backup for 10+ years, like CDs and DVDs were used in the past.
The only problem might be it's price. It must be really cheap; otherwise good old HDDs will still be better for long-term cold storage (if plugged-in for a few moments, every couple of years, to move the oil inside).
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Wrong.
his disk will have
12,345 copies of
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Some time back, I seem to have lost all pictures from 2000-2018; (ahem... misplaced is the official version) - including some scanned copies of now-destroyed hard copies. While I am sure they exist somewhere in cyberspace, a read only speedy disk would be ideal to avoid such embarrassments in the future.
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Almost guaranteed to be expensive, plus it seems that one will need to use their proprietary software, and it's not clear whether Linux will be supported
For the general public, It sounds like a no-go
"A single swap file or partition may be up to 128 MB in size. [...] [I]f you need 256 MB of swap, you can create two 128-MB swap partitions." (M. Welsh & L. Kaufman, Running Linux, 2e, 1996, p. 49)
genuinely can't think of anything i'd use it for, i certainly wouldn't buy one. gonna vote with the "sell it and buy something useful" guys.
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This sounds like a lot of e-waste
Although, I think I would find some use in it for important data like SSH keys or backup tokens
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Exactly this. This drive sounds quite useful for anything that needs an immutable audit trail, such as for regulatory reasons.
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unixXX file is the only thing that can keep me alive when SHTF
and it will be a hot commodity post nuclear winter.
I might need hundreds of this for different taste, err distro flavors.
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As mentioned, personal & family photos/videos seems to be the obvious choice, especially as I'm seeing some of my older audio CDs showing a scattering pin holes (a worrying trend). DVD-R/CD-R are more prone to 'rust', IIRC.
Business backups, held in a vault.
I surmise that perhaps a power up of the SSD, every 5 years or so, along with a fsck/badblocks would refresh the chip(s) enough to extend data retention. Maybe even a copy/compare process.
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I think one could also buy a few Blu-Ray disks with a Blu-Ray writer, and achieve the same results, now.
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You guys joke, but archiving the entire series of MLP on this thing would be fantastic for a post-WWIII apocalypse getaway.
Include actual usable *nix isos with common tools and drivers to make use of even the most trashed machines in the hellscape we call "The Wastelands"
Power plant, industrial process management software, design software, editing software, instructional how tos, LOTS of books.
And nothing to keep them powered up.
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If you don't already know how to wire up your own generator / alternator from scrap parts you're not doing life right.
Backing up some photos
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If they are provably write-once, then these disks can definitely serve a purpose for auditing, record keeping, and forensic purposes. A lot of professional use-cases for that.