On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 12:22:53PM -0500, Mike Katz via cctalk wrote:
> In 1981 when i got my first 5MB hard disk drive at work (I had to write the
> drivers for the OS myself) I was able to put all or my source code,
> binaries, executable, applications and the operating system and not fill
> half of that disk.

A the first computer science class in school (very early 90s) our teacher
held up a 3.5" 1.44M floppy and told us that "this can hold all you'll
ever write" ... well, that aged worse than fresh milk ;-)

> A single .raw file from my camera can be over 20MB now.

Indeed. The camera archive (2 people shooting DSLRs - strictly as a hobby,
not professionals) here is at 1.5T now here and of course only ever growing.

Even the compressed archive of my diploma thesis (written in LaTeX,
as one does - so no bloated MS Word files) won't fit on a 1.44M floppy
at 1.9M in size and that happened not that many years after the above
overly optimistic statement.

And anybody doing _any_ amount of programming outside of ones job
surely has written way more source code than would ever fit on a 1.44M
floppy, even after LZ4 compression. I know I did and I don't get to
write much code these days.

> Is technology advancing us or just helping us to create more and more
> storage needs 😁?

"Too much storage capacity" is a thing that fundamentally cannot exist,
data grows to fill available storage capacity eventually (and usually
much sooner than one likes). ;-)

Kind regards,
          Alex.
-- 
"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and
 looks like work."                                      -- Thomas A. Edison

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