IT'S THE YEAR OF THE TERABYTE
I remember my first hard drive. Back then, getting a hard drive for
your computer was tantamount to a right of passage. It meant that
you no longer had to struggle inserting floppy discs with their
limited capacities and their plethora of assorted frailties. Until
my first hard drive, whenever I wanted to load a program, I first
had to find the floppy that contained the wanted application, insert
it into the disc drive and then wait until it loaded. And wait. And
wait.
My first hard drive's capacity was a whopping 20 megabytes and at
the time, I thought it was all the storage I would ever need in my
entire lifetime. It also cost around $900 and again at the time, I
thought it was a steal at that price. Of course, the programs such
as the word processor and other productivity applications were so
small that they actually fit on a single floppy disc. So a 20
megabyte drive really did represent a bottomless repository for all
of my computing needs. But nothing ever stays the same and when it
comes to computers, that's a good thing.
The operating systems and the programs our computers had to run
continued to grow as they became more feature-rich and graphically
intensive. A word processor that was 100 kilobytes swelled to 100
megabytes and more. So hard drive capacities grew to meet their
storage demands. I remember seeing the first gigabyte hard drives
appear and thinking "My gosh! That's a THOUSAND megabytes on one
hard drive!" Again I thought that it was all the storage I would
ever need in my entire lifetime.
So now we have entered the "Terabyte decade" with a THOUSAND
gigabytes of storage on a single hard drive. But I'm no longer taken
in with the subterfuge. No longer do these drives hold the promise
of all the storage I will ever need. Because now I know that along
with my mammoth operating system and bulging applications are the
untold quantities of digital data I will be ever generating and
collecting such as photographs and high definition videos that
promise to eat every single terabyte I can throw at them. So it's a
good thing that already there are multi-terabyte drives emerging.
Just like the growing progression of the multi-megabyte and
multi-gigabyte drives, terabyte drives begin their growth with baby
steps. First to appear after the single terabyte drives have been
1.5 terabyte models and now there are 2 terabyte versions just
making it to the market as we speak. Soon we'll see 3 terabyte
models and by the end of the year, maybe even a 4 terabyte version?
But capacity isn't the only thing repeating. The dollars you pay to
buy them are pretty much in the same range as those drives of yore.
As the capacities grow, the purchase price of the smaller capacity
models decrease. But I don't think we'll see the prices of even the
newest high capacity terabyte models top what those initial megabyte
and gigabyte drives cost. For example a top-of-the-line 2 terabyte
external hard drive goes for around $180. The former top-of-the-line
megabyte model sold for over a $1000 and gigabyte models around $800
when they first appeared. So it looks like things are getting better
as the storage pattern repeats. Who knows? Maybe when the first
petabyte drive (that's a thousand terabytes) makes its debut, it
will sell for under a hundred bucks. Anyone want to make a bet? I'm
also betting that most of us will still be around when that happens.
I'll get back to you in a few years and we'll compare notes.
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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