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SSD Prices Continue 3-Year Plunge

Lucas123 writes "After dropping 20% in the second quarter of 2012 alone, SSD prices fell another 10% in the second half of the year. The better deals for SSDs are now around 80- to 90-cents-per-gigabyte of capacity, though some sale prices have been even lower, according IHS and other research firms. For some models, the prices have dropped 300% over the past three years. At the same time, hard disk drive prices have remained "inflated" — about 47% higher than they were prior to the 2011 Thai floods, according to DRAMeXchange."

17 of 347 comments (clear)

  1. Here's another WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The summary says that the prices on some models has dropped 300%. That's impossible, since the price cannot drop below zero, unless of course THEY are paying YOU to take the drive (as in soviet russia).

    1. Re:Here's another WTF by omnichad · · Score: 4, Funny

      Assuming it's proper English to someone, I'd assume the logic goes like this.

      The price was $12, now it's $3. The price dropped by 300%. That is, 300% of the final price has been subtracted from the first price. It's complete nonsense, and completely backwards really.

  2. You'll be waiting a long time by DidgetMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At $.90 per GB, SSDs are still about 15 times more expensive than the same amount of hard disk space. Forget about trying to put your 2 TB of data on SSDs. I like the trend of reduced prices for SSDs. They are finally affordable enough to put my most active data on (e.g. boot files, applications), but if you think they will be a viable complete substitute for hard drives anytime soon, think again.

    1. Re:You'll be waiting a long time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Using the phrase "spinning rust" the first time was clever.

      Using it the next four times was just pretentious and annoying. Just use the term "HDD" like everyone else if you want to refer to them more than once.

    2. Re:You'll be waiting a long time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      You sound like a dork writing "spinning rust" repeatedly.

    3. Re:You'll be waiting a long time by Guspaz · · Score: 4, Informative

      Thing is, everything else doesn't have to follow Moore's Law - spinning rust has been growing faster than Moore's Law for a little while now.

      Have they been? WD announced 2TB drives in early January 2009. WD announced 4TB drives in late November 2012. That's a period of 34.5 months to double capacity, and launch pricing was roughly $400 in both cases.

      Moore's Law as it is currently accepted says we should see doublings every 18-24 months (18 months is for doubled performance, 24 months is for doubled transistor count), so it's clear that HDDs are improving at a rate much slower than Moore's Law, not faster as you claim.

      SSDs, on the other hand... The Intel x25-m came out in late 2008 at an MSRP of $1,190 for the 160GB model. Today I've seen the Intel 330 180GB as low as $90. Per-gig, that's $7.4375/GB -> $0.50/GB, or 14.875x improvement in price.

      That's 3.9 doublings over the course of 4 years. So SSDs are improving much faster than Moore's law, while HDDs are improving much slower than Moore's law.

      Without significant changes in the improvement rates, SSDs will become cheaper per-gig than HDDs in less than four years.

    4. Re:You'll be waiting a long time by Adriax · · Score: 4, Funny

      Turtles.
      FET = Flying Electric Turtles.
      That's why SSDs are so expensive still, they have to breed nano-scale turtles that are almost impossible to corral because they either fly over the tiny fence or conduct along it.

      --
      I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
  3. Re:300% drop? by NixieBunny · · Score: 4, Funny

    There's a large, smoking hole in the ground where the price fell through the Earth's crust.

    --
    The determined Real Programmer can write Fortran programs in any language.
  4. Re:Can't wait by codewarren · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've never had an SSD, and had a very bad experience with a first gen one

    So what was the bad experience you had with a first gen SSD besides not having one?

  5. prices have dropped 300%.... by vincefn · · Score: 5, Informative

    For some models, the prices have dropped 300% over the past three years

    Great, so this means that in 2012, to get some SSD disk you will be paid twice the price you would have paid to get them in 2009 ?

    Sounds interesting, just the kind of storage I need for my perpetual motion simulations !

  6. Re:WTF?!?!?! by Hadlock · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here are the hard numbers for anyone who's curious:

    http://www.behardware.com/articles/881-7/components-returns-rates-7.html

    - Intel 0.45% (against 1.73%)

    - Samsung 0.48% (N/A)

    - Corsair 1.05% (against 2.93%)

    - Crucial 1.11% (against 0.82%)

    - OCZ 5.02% (against 7.03%)

    Return rates specifically for OCZ models:

    - 40.00% for the OCZ Petrol 64 GB

    - 39.42% for the OCZ Petrol 128 GB

    - 30.85% for the OCZ Octane 128 GB SATA II

    - 29.46% for the OCZ Octane 64 GB SATA II

    - 9.73% for the OCZ Vertex 2 120 GB 3.5"

    - 9.59% for the OCZ Vertex 2 120 GB

    - 6.73% for the OCZ Vertex 2 60 GB

    - 5.43% for the OCZ Agility 3 240 GB

    - 5.12% for the OCZ Vertex Plus 128 GB

    Also if you have a Crucial M4 make sure you have the correct firmware as Crucial keeps releasing/shipping units with buggy firmware updates that can brick your drive.

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
  7. Re:Kinda tiny by omnichad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Put your OS on it, and application binaries. You can have a second drive for everything else.

  8. Re:WTF?!?!?! by Hadlock · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not sure you understand how percentages work.

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
  9. the article is worth what you pay for it by jlv · · Score: 4, Informative

    "The better deals for SSDs are now around 80- to 90-cents-per-gigabyte of capacity"? Where's this guy been?

    The better deals for SSDs are now close to 50 cents a gigabyte. Two months ago I picked up four 128GB Samsung 830s for $70 each. This past month I've seen a PNY 120GB for $70, an Intel 160GB for $90, and the 128GB Samsung for $70 again. Better deals on larger SSDs (over 200GB) are now 70 cents and less - Newegg just had the a 500GB Samsung 840 for $330 (66 cents/GB).

  10. Re:UK HDs seem to be down to 2011 prices by telchine · · Score: 4, Funny

    LOL. Works both ways, I suppose.

    That's what (s)he said!

  11. Re:mSATA SSDs by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 5, Funny

    Some HDD sizes are now cheaper than before the Flood.

    Too bad Moses spent so much time trying to save squirrels and zebras that he couldn't be bothered to save some of that tech.

    --
    Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
  12. Re:Can't wait by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Informative

    The problem is like in X86 there isn't any real competition and I'd say its worse than in X86 because at least AMD, which I've been building exclusively for the past 5+ years, the performance is "good enough" for the vast majority of users including the gamers but in the HDD arena the competition is making such piss poor products that I'd be afraid to buy them.

    You see pre-flood we had 4 players in the game, Hitachi, Samsung, Seagate, and WD, but now there is only WD and Seagate and ever since the Maxtor buyout Seagate quality has really gone down the shitter so there isn't really any choice but WD. Pre-flood I was buying Samsung EcoGreens at $35 a TB but since the buyouts I've found anything that Seagate makes over 500Gb to be Russian roulette with your data while the WDs have a MUCH lower failure rate, at least from what I've seen in the shop.

    So I'd say what they are doing certainly isn't illegal, although why they allowed Seagate and WD to buy out the competition to make it a duopoly I'll never know, but since Seagate seems unable to fix the serious failure rate of their over 500Gb drives you have WD charging 40%+ over what Seagate is charging and they'll get it as nobody wants to risk losing their data. Just go look at any of the BF and Xmas sales and you'll see what I mean, the Seagates are selling for $60-$70 for 1Tb, $70-$80 for a TB and a half, while WD is selling for $100 a Tb, $150 for a 2TB and they can't seem to keep them in stock whereas the Seagates have been on sale for weeks and they appear to have plenty of stock left.

    Its not the market itself keeping the prices high, its the fact you really only have one supplier worth buying. Like I said you can take an AMD quad or Hexa and even the gamers will be happy with the performance but NOBODY is happy when they buy that cheapo Seagate 1.5TB and it craps itself in 3 months and takes their data with it. WD knows this so they keep their prices high, knowing that all it takes is getting burned by Seagate for a time or two for the customers to see its better to spend the money than lose their stuff. This is just a perfect example of "you get what you pay for" where someone who makes a better product charges more than the guy making cheap shit and this is why the prices remain high on the WD side of the aisle, they know their competition just can't seem to make a good product ATM.

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    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.