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SSDs Approaching Price Parity With HDDs (computerworld.com)

Lucas123 writes: Hard disk drive per-gigabyte pricing has remained relatively stagnant over the past three years, and prices are expected to be completely flat over at least the next two, allowing SSDs to significantly close the cost gap, according to a new report. The report, from DRAMeXchange, stated that this marks the fourth straight quarter that the SSD price decline has exceeded 10%. Over the past three years, SSDs have dropped from 31 to 13 cents per gig annually. In contrast, from 2012 to 2015, per gigabyte pricing for HDDs dropped just one cent per year from 9 cents in 2012 to 6 cents this year. However, through 2017, the per-gigabyte price of HDDs is expected to remain flat: 6 cents per gigabyte. Consumer SSDs were on average were selling for 99 cents a gigabyte in 2012. From 2013 to 2015, the price dropped from 68 cents to 39 cents per gig, meaning the average 1TB SSD sells for about $390 today. Next year, SSD prices will decline to 24 cents per gig and in 2017, they're expected to drop to 17 cents per gig. That means a 1TB SSD on average would retail for $170, though online prices are often much lower than average vendor retail prices. DRAMeXchange also stated that SSDs are expected to be in 31% of new consumer laptops next year, and by 2017 they'll be in 41%.

2 of 272 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What's the MTBF? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 0, Troll

    "Finally the rotting elephant in the room with SSDs is the way they fail and that is without warning."

    Stop saying shit that makes you look like a moron. Oh wait ... it's hairyfeet the troll ... carry on then.

    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
  2. Re:It's time to let the HDD's go. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Bullshit Potsy. If a HDD fails you can recover the data. An SSD, no. Failures can happen anytime. A drive failure is not always "announced" and drive's service time being shorten through standard drive usage is unacceptable. FYI if you compute takes awhile to boot - you might want to look at your operating system and the programs that are loading.