Anecdotal indeed. Most hard drives that do fail, fail within 5 to 8 years 
without the constant read/writes. That is a far cry from 30 years. I have not 
seen a drive last 30 years, because, well they haven't been around that long. 

Of course quality comes into play, and the fact that often it's mechanical and 
not electrical failures that occur, but still, many failures I've seen (and 
I've seen a lot being an IT guy) are due to the actual media going bad. I don't 
think we realize how much hard drives actually read/write to buffers and 
virtual memory, over and over again, often in the same physical place on the 
drive. 

Bob


On Aug 2, 2010, at 2:55 PM, Neal Campbell wrote:

> Purely anecdotal but from what I read, if you continuously wrote on the disk
> drive, a MLC-controller SSD would last more than 5 years and a SLC
> controller SSD would last more than 30 years.
> 
> Add to this, the fact that its not sensitive to the rough handling a laptop
> takes and I think you are better off worrying about the life of the screen
> backlight than the disk drive!
> 
> 
> Neal Campbell
> Abroham Neal Software
> www.abrohamnealsoftware.com
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