• Kyle@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    This seems like a non issue dramatised for headlines, they are phasing out outdated sata connection to only favour current m.2.

    It’s like gpu and motherboard manufacturers announcing they are no longer including VGA ports in favour of DVI display port and HDMI. I don’t think that was a bad thing.

    I’m sure some people who are lucky enough to have hardware that still requires SATA want to keep upgrading to new SATA devices but it’s been enough time. I’m ok with just m.2 now.

    • eli@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      There are millions of devices that still and will continue to use SATA.

      My Synology NAS only accepts SATA. So if one of my SSDs dies I’m just shit out of luck and have to find a 8 bay M.2 NAS to have a comparable alternative?

      Your comment is beyond ridiculous

      • kerrigan778@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        6 days ago
        1. Don’t use SSDs for a server…
        2. They make SATA M2 adapters
        3. Seriously are you putting sata SSDs in your NAS? Don’t…
        • jivandabeast@lemmy.browntown.dev
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          6 days ago

          There are definitely valid reasons to use SSDs in a server/array. One of my proxmox servers runs 4x m.2s in raidz1 so all my vms are super snappy. Depending on what you’re running you can really see benefits, for example:

          • Elastic Stack
          • Network storage for photo editing
          • Lemmy
          • Immich

          Pretty much anything with a lot of metadata or tons of files will see benefits from running on SSDs, this comes with the caveat that cheap ssds wear quickly and are a pain in the ass but if you need it, you need it

    • Scurouno@lemmy.ca
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      5 days ago

      Tell that to my school division’s IT department, who have us all running Displayport to VGA adapters, attaching to our monitors and projectors via VGA. This is because our displays are either a) too old and only support VGA and DVI in, or b) they purchased displays with HDMI, but our ThinkPad laptops only have Displayport out.

      Sometimes it is more a matter of mixing and matching tech in large cash-strapped systems that might get slapped by these issues as well.

      And yes, those adapters cause as many headaches as you might think.

      • Kyle@lemmy.ca
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        5 days ago

        I hear you there. Almost every meeting presentation room I use still requires my usb-c to vga adapter and I just have to live with it. It’s the natural state of such places I think. It feels so amazing when I can plug directly into my laptop without an adapter. And yea I agree, they are a headache.