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System Name | Firelance. |
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Keyboard | Razer Pro Type Ultra |
Software | Windows 10 Professional x64 |
I don't care about theoreticals, I care about the practical reality in the market right now. That is what I'm buying into, not the promise of tomorrow. So far, QLC did not deliver and there were numerous other SSD related developments that similarly did not deliver. In all new things storage the wise approach is to wait and see how reliable it truly turns out to be. You're right that in theory you could make great QLC drives... but then the next question is, how expensive are those? If you have to put expensive memory and other hardware next to ultra cheap NAND, the net gain might be zero, and judging by the pricing, it apparently is.
But hey, to each his own, if you have faith in QLC, by all means, worship it.
The retention figure is interesting, I knew the article, but yes, all things considered 10 years is still pretty long in the consumer situation I suggested. Its not very likely a mechanical HDD will do that much better as far as recovering your data goes; it just runs a different sort of risk. So fair enough, maybe QLC is half decent for longer term mass storage (not necessarily cold storage ).
Do you really think that Intel and Samsung, two of the biggest NAND manufacturers in the world, would put money into R&D and production of QLC if they didn't have faith in it? I don't. As such, I have faith in QLC inasmuch as I have faith in those companies' abilities to make prudent decisions around the future of NAND.
My personal take on QLC is that it hasn't been prioritised as highly as it could have been, mostly due to the advent of 3D NAND which extended the market lifetime of TLC NAND. But all good things come to an end and TLC's is coming, which means QLC is now getting the focus it needs to become a viable product. Unfortunately, "viable" means "not cut to the bone because Samsung are greedy fucks" like this model of drive.