"This thing probably has more storage in it than your entire household" Bro that thing has 5 billion times the amount of storage of every school laptop in existence
Not hard to have more, especially when you can grab two 12 TB externals for around $350, but those aren't very fast drives, whereas 12tb, 7200rpm, 256mb cache WD Golds can cost as much as $400 each and that still cannot compete with a $100/TB SATA SSD.
@@justincase1898 My mobo ones are black though. Even my old h81 asus board had black sata cables.I had a h61 mobo that came with blue sata cables which looked fine IMO. Only optical drives come with red sata cables.
Seeing harddrives grow has been interesting. My first one was 2gb. And I remember when I got my first 80gb, I thought I'd never need more. If things keep growing at the same rate it did last time, then it won't be long until we hit 80 TB.
Clemens, You are here?😂 I Love your video with the funniest GuteFrage.net-Questions. If i have a Bad day, i am watching it and it makes me feel better😂
In earlier days before the release of IDE drives all drives that I knew about used 1KB=1024Bytes, 1MB=1024KB, and 1GB=1024MB (but it took a while before 1GB this become reality, and it was HUGE). The drive types were mainly MFM, RLL, ESDI and SCSI for MACs and servers. And there was no confusion about storage and memory capacity. It was even common that the drive capacity was a bit above the rated size, I guess not to cheat the customer of anything. Then IDE arrived as a lower-cost alternative for personal computers. At the start, all was as before but after I started to see drives with 1000 as a base for size instead of 1024. I think it was Conner or Quantum that was the first to start this, but I can not guarantee this. I think these brands were new with the introduction of IDE. The traditional brands continued to use the 1024 base for a while before they also switched over. I am sure though that Hitachi was one of the latest to switch over and they gave you that little extra. I still have some 75GB drives and I think also some 80GB that is based on proper GBs. But why did this change happened? I am quite certain that it's because IDE, in the beginning, was intended for the to a great degree computer illiterate consumer market and that someone with the first manufacturer to do this thought that by using 1000 based drives instead of 1024 they could sell slightly smaller drives for the same money and nobody would notice. And it seemed most didn't. I remembered that I thought it was highly immoral of the manufacturers to use fake KBs and MBs, so I avoided them and bought from honest manufactures that gave me the proper size. It looked very similar to someone selling using a slightly lighter pound or kg weight to cheat the customer, which is strictly illegal. But after some times, all had switched over. Today this part of computer history seems to have been lost to almost all that talk about storage size. To me, it seems strange, as I observed it happening. It looked like something very close to fraud has changed the norm of the whole IT business so that now all people think is that there is a very strange difference between storage and RAM, while the history behind it should have been known.
This would be extremely useful and popular if they were able to sell below the $500 mark. When that happens is when ill move my 100TB of spinning rust over to SSD's.
@@nuwantilakaratna7157 Yeah, $3,200 is beyond too much for a single drive in the consumer space. It's another case of a consumer brand selling a enterprise product.
@@nuwantilakaratna7157 Yes, many things would be popular if you didn't have to think about the price. But if your already imagining such things, why not U.2 or M.2 and not bottleneck everything?
@@trelauney Because its hard to fit that many chips in that form factor, so its very unlikely? Me personally, SATA3 SSD speeds are more than enough for my archival purposes. If any company would even make a 3.5" SSD with that capacity for the same price as HDD's I would gladly buy it simply because of the greater lifespan/lower failure compared to HDD's.
@Arnywar Yep. This was also to protect them from the comments section too, because they tend to see the negative comments a lot, like all the people who kept complaining about Jake. Edit: Linus actually mentioned “Probation writer” in this video, backing up what we knew.
@@mizinoinovermyhead.7523 Yarp. Also my guess. She will fit in with that hive of nerds. "big (O:)", indeed. That's a good hire served on a silver platter. And good by LMG to shield her from the weirdness that is us lot.
For the first time ever, I have to say Microsoft did nothing wrong in this instance. All real systems use 1024 steps. The reason manufacturers of storage don't, is because it makes their storage seem larger. It's just marketing.
Agree with you there. Linus should know better. You would get the same in Linux. Computing since the "dawn of time" has always been in binary or base 2 (1000 doesn't fit in base 2) 1024 does. What does the data store in when you break it down Linus? That's right 1s and 0s. Therefore 1024x1024x1024x1024 =1TB
Wait, so computers internally use powers of 2 right? That’s just how they work, no changing that, sure. Still, wouldn’t it be better to make these units in the more human-comprehensible base 10 system when dealing with the human interface?
@@AnimeFan1981 Would depend on the linux, but several of them would show the units as "TiB", rather than just "TB." And others, namely GNOME derived, don't do 1KB = 2^10 bytes.
Linus: This thing has more storage than your entire house Me: ... **slides my pathetically small 50TB storage server out of frame** ... you're absolutely right.
about the same amount as Storage as my NAS.... you're so right, it feels pathetically small nowadays, considering I could fit all of that in 3 of those SSDs... or a half exodrive, lol. Literally my entire 4U server in the palm of my hand. crazy. Sadly, too expensive. So spinning rust it is.
agreed. but at that point who knows what will be the standard. I think in 10 years everything will be crazy. I'm starting to become a game developer soon since i finished my degree. atm age 20 so idk since i don't know much about old tech but it does get crazy generation after generation expecially from AMD and their ryzen stuff
For that price you can get the 15TB Samsung PM1733, which is a super-fast PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD... you just need to get a u.2 adapter card and cable to plug it in.
@@shamarioscantlebury5891 awesome.. that's actually really nice and tidy compared to mine xD I wish I had the patience to clean it up but I honestly don't have the patience nor the interest to do it.... the exploded spaghetti mayhem doesn't really bother me xD
I actually just realised, not only are two 8TB QVO way cheaper, you can put both in a silent USB C gen 2 enclosure in raid 0 and get much better performance than this drive also.
well consumer means someone not getting work to pay for it(and ofc enterprise) so creators would be consumers to since they are buying them by themselves
@@yeahyeahyeah688 well 3 years ago I wasn't sure whether I wanted an i7 7700k or i7 6800k, I ended up getting the 6800k since it has 2 extra cores. The 6800k was an HEDT chip and used the x99a chipset. In other words, my cpu is essentially the cheapest workstation cpu from that generation, but it's overclocked and being used in a gaming pc. I paired it with a gtx 1070 and 2x8gb of ram.
Sorry for the correction, but it's about 97% the capacity (1000/1024). So a 1TB drive will show as 0.97TiB (Tebibyte). As for the drive in question, yes that one comes out to about 91% the rated capacity, but I'm not sure why that would be. If it was truely 15.3TB, it should show up as about 14.9TiB in Windows.
@@SynthaticBeats How? It makes sense if it were just a clean plate and they added the computer as another layer in post, but its a handheld shot so there would have to be tracking to keep it matching or rotoscoping. Either way it looks really clean. I can't see any roto or signs of content aware fill.
@@NAdoTEg i thought the same afterwards xd but i think you can acctualy see the edge of bothe frames in the middle becaus it gets blury for a second. So i would guess that the camera man just tryed his best to keep it still.
In fairness, they would succeed in doing so, if we all bought Ridgewallet wallets. Unfortunately, all of us skip the sponsor with the double tap right arrow, and they are left forever trying...
15.3TB is barely enough to store all my full HD and UHD films, music and photos. Currently using 14TB and 12TB drives but do look forward to affordable high capacity SSD, so long as it is very reliable.
Linus: here, an average 8 TB NVMe stick. Also Linus, pointing to a box more than twice the size of the stick: 15 TB crammed in such a tiny enclosure, incredibile!
I have about 144 TBs of storage capacity. I archive loads of videos and have assets i use for 3d and video. Plus my render outputs are usually 4k 60fps 16 bit multilayer EXR files for animation. So trust me. For the normies 15 tb is alot, but for independent data buffs and indie production; more is always better.
I think we can all agree, here you can not just blame Microsoft, its more of an issue with Computer Techs (+History) and the "SI - Unit System" used in Physics and everything else...
It boils down to the number base used to count... Humans use base 10 (1, 10, 100, 1000 etc.) while digital electronics tends to use base 2 (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024 etc.). Using base 10 is IMO a ruse to impress users with larger looking capacity.
Ngl, I'd download every movie I like in 4k, every single game, and all the music I would ever want. I would then put it on a laptop and never need wifi again.
I had a similar experience. But with Theresa William I recovered all my losses, My initial investment capital with her was $1,000 and i made $8,200 as profit in just the first week of trade. It was very big for me considering the fact that i have lost money in the past trying to trade on my own.
What you're saying is that Windows uses the original definition of a kilobyte being 1024 bytes, whereas the manufacturer uses the snowflake generation I-can't-do-math definition where they dumb it down and actually make it more confusing, as well as get to falsely advertise the drive to make it seem larger than it really is. A byte is a measure of binary storage, and therefore must always be a power of 2, not a power of 10. All that storage space is is a bunch of transistors that either hold electrons or don't, either a 1 or a 0. That means that any amount of transistors will always have a total capacity that is a power of 2, period, end of story.
I disagree that windows likes to "think different" about storage. Most operating systems/software I have seen uses that same system for storage at least on a low level
Well, for example Gnome is fully aware that K means 10^3, M 10^6, G 10^9, T 10^12 and so on. KDE uses the 1024 increments, but it's using the Ki, Mi, Gi, Ti abbreviations, so they can count as well. It's just Microsoft's silliness, but that's probably the least annoying thing about that OS.
@@zxy7529 And they are using! The problem is that marketing people started using kilobytes as 1000 bytes. And someone remember to create kibi to make sure that it's 1024.
Microsoft is in the wrong by the IEC Standard it is 1000 Bytes per Kilobytes becuse Kilo means 1000 and is based on 10s and is 10^3... Where as Kibi is based on 2 so it becomes 2^10 which is 1024... physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
@@gosera-1108 the physicists have no business defining standards for computer scientists. I'm not defining the length of a meter and they shouldn't try to define the size of my datavolume.
I'm fine with a 512Gb SSD and separate terabyte HDD's. Lots of file and game storage on your HDD's and your demanding programs and OS go on the SSD. I happen to have a 1Tb SSD and 2x1Tb HDD's so all my games can be on the SSD. Storing games on a HDD usually doesn't affect performance, only loading times. Minecraft is an exception due to the generation of new chunks.
2:42 I haven't advanced yet - but I can already see you explaining "terabytes vs Trillions of bytes" AND how much overhead past that Windows has in formatting a drive.
thats a lot of storage for wallpapers
maybe if cooled with vodka would be faster, no?
hello boris
what kinds of wallpaper though
hi Boris
Comrade boris!
"61 copies of CoD Warzone"
Ah, forget Terabytes or Tebibytes, Warzones are the football fields of storage
"61 copies of CoD Warzone"
For now.
Or 42 copies of ark
I mean, it and CoD BlOps Cold War take up pretty much most of my primary 500GB game drive.
@@rajatkamalchauhan1507 ark for Xbox is 118 gigs
When season 2 comes out it will be 1 copy of warzone
I demand a petition for getting this beautiful wallpaper in 4k
40k lmao
8k*
Heres A link to a video with the wallpaper in the description. If you know it, you know it lol
th-cam.com/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/w-d-xo.html
@@narenpai link no work can repost?
Game devs: Nice! Now we can make the games 5TB each so you can store an entire 3 of them!
I bet all the assets are like 64K
There just gonna be a TXT files that has more "words" then 43,000,000,000,000,000 Copies of Shakespeare has letters
Cod 69 would be at least 14.9Tb
@@vicesepteic2453 and it will still be boring
and wear off ur ssd like that
Ah, finally, a vessel large enough for all my Minecraft mods.
POV: You play kitchen sink modpacks
Ok
I feel your pain, my minecraft folder takes up over 50Gb of space.
@@PunakiviAddikti that's nothing lol u will be good with a half of a terabyte not even
Welcome to: things no one can afford
This is the average joe comment
Edit: I know this because I did as well
How true
Lmao
Well I can afford
Just wait a couple of years
"This thing probably has more storage in it than your entire household"
Bro that thing has 5 billion times the amount of storage of every school laptop in existence
Lies
Facts
THATS A LIE! More like 500 million bro.
Can confirm, school computers have 200 kilobytes of storage.
@Patrick_ Pinhead i hqven't been in school in a while so i don't remember how much storage they had
0:25 When she keeps going after you finished.
Actually amazing 😂
So underrated
A bit like Mrs Linus? lol
Lmao
Wish I could relate.
Linus: "This SSD probably has more storage than your entire household!"
Data Hoarders: "Wanna bet?"
I have a literal storinator I got from Backblaze's giveaway in 2017.
150TB. I have literally every piece of media I can think of.
@@Hyperious_in_the_air that's awesome.
Not hard to have more, especially when you can grab two 12 TB externals for around $350, but those aren't very fast drives, whereas 12tb, 7200rpm, 256mb cache WD Golds can cost as much as $400 each and that still cannot compete with a $100/TB SATA SSD.
Clearly he's never met anyone who runs a Plex server.
Can confirm. Up to 120TB now. Debating if I build another tower, upgrade the array drives, or both.
"This thing has more storage than your entire household"
You didn't need to cut that deep Linus :(
Let's see...
Yup. My house has only a couple terabytes in total 😆😅
Mine has 26TB+ and at work I have 54TB+ (video Producer/editor)
Livin in Spain without the s...
14TB on my desk, but that's between 3 hard drives and an SSD. Set up for only 6.5TB storage capacity though (plus backups)
You mean not everybody has an DAS rack with 12 drives running in RAID 6 that has 40 GB of storage when using 4TB drives?!?!?!?
Linus: "The most ass looking data cable"
Me: *looks at all my red sata cables that are in use connecting all my drives*
right, who wastes money buy buying pretty sata cables... i always just use the freebies in the mobo box or ssd/hdd box
@@justincase1898 omg... Almost cried inside. It's a data pc, not a work of art!
@@justincase1898 My mobo ones are black though.
Even my old h81 asus board had black sata cables.I had a h61 mobo that came with blue sata cables which looked fine IMO.
Only optical drives come with red sata cables.
@@BloopTube next step is the rgb cables
The ones in my mum's are mustard color
Seeing harddrives grow has been interesting.
My first one was 2gb. And I remember when I got my first 80gb, I thought I'd never need more.
If things keep growing at the same rate it did last time, then it won't be long until we hit 80 TB.
We have 128 now!
My first hard drive , was 80gb, it was maybe a year before I had to clear some room from it because, well, programming course and some games.
same thing with usb sticks
$50 use to buy you 1tb of HDD storage, but now $50 can get you 1tb of SSD storage so I don't think it'll be too bad
@Moji PSX He’s cappin lol, there’s no way there’s a $50 1tb ssd right now. the market is fucked
I like how the LMG staff is trolling him with those wallpapers lol
Lmao he's talking about storage and I'm just laughing at wide linus
broad linus broader than the monitor🤣
What do you mean? Linus sets all the wallpapers
XD love it
@Gurkirat Singh There are some different linus wallpapers in other videos
I would use that to expand my "homework" folder
That thesis on “grabbing em by the essay”
Ah yes, the good old "homework" folder
Never underestimate the homework folder.
8K homework videos
60fps hw
I just bought a WD 7gb/s NVME SSD...it's amazing how overkill this is :'D
I whish I'd have informed myself better before buying.
welcome to the NVMe world lol love mine.
How the FRICK you afford a 7tb one?
Clemens, You are here?😂
I Love your video with the funniest GuteFrage.net-Questions. If i have a Bad day, i am watching it and it makes me feel better😂
@@ceilyurie856 can you read?
@@ceilyurie856 gb/ass
I love how they use warzone as a measurement of ridiculous storage size 😂
As a qualified child, I can confirm, yes, that is a bruh moment
Same. I verify this document
Same. i verify this Claim.
As a former child, I can confirm with the child.
My opinion holds no weight. I never knew you were supposed to get certified until way after my 18th birthday.
Same, as a verified child I approve of this statement
With 2-3 of those i can have a SSD cache larger than my actual HDD volume....
Tempting
weird flex
@@RWLN508D it's not like i can afford them, i can't
But it would be space efficient...
1 of these is the total usable storage on servers on my network.. Hurts a little bit..
@@glenns7866 8TB drives are about 100$ each on eBay, get a few! I've gotten 14 so far.
@@chris11d7 not in the UK unfortunately. Much more expensive
Linus: "Cramming data into this tiny enclosure with no moving parts"
Colton: "Is he talking about me again!"
truth has been spoken @morgan
Imagine showing this to someone back in 1996
Person: There's more data here than in the entire USA floppy disk industry.
@@takezokimura2571 more than entire world.
sir how many floppy disks this would be ? 🙂
Show that to someone from 1966.
@Moji PSX your joke now will probably be true in 10 years lol
Finally an SSD that can store my "Homework" folder
I use google drive for that :) (since its free if you have A LOT OF emails)
Yep, been deleting some of my old "homework" cuz new "reference" are coming in.
Man I just did this joke. My bad for not checking the comment section
@johnes walter ?
"The biggest consumer drive is TINY"
I was here before the title change, your black magic does not work on me, witch.
SAME
yeaaa they changed the vid title right?
The fools
Witcher*
Yo same
Can't wait to use this for my 3 TB "homework" folder
Thats an unhealthy amount of homework.
Why do you need a home work folder when there are other webs
@@wasikabir2046 What if your internet shuts off for some reason and you just really need to see some homework?
@@LegendaryMantis mobile data lol
Poor kid....
Linus: "hears a word that's 5 lightyears away from being relatable to the sponsor"
Linus: "It's free real estate"
Finally, I can access my 15TB “homework” folder that is actually every season of Seinfeld in 4K at super speeds
is Seinfeld even available in 4k?
@@jreb58 I don’t think so...
@@jreb58
Yes
and it just works
@@toddhoward1498 where?
I hate when he sarcastically says “probably has more storage than your entire household” and sadly he aint wrong...
lol i 128 tb server in my closet right now 128
@Ethan McCaskey I have 6mb ps2 memory card
Bout half of what’s just in my gaming rig.
He's wrong with me because my dad is a photographer and he has over 30 terabytes of hard drive space to store stuff
@@ryanhiley8012 I have a 16MB sd card so shut up poor
Linus: How much would you pay?
Everyone else: Less than what you would pay.
@@alinapaasz1841 no
In earlier days before the release of IDE drives all drives that I knew about used 1KB=1024Bytes, 1MB=1024KB, and 1GB=1024MB (but it took a while before 1GB this become reality, and it was HUGE). The drive types were mainly MFM, RLL, ESDI and SCSI for MACs and servers. And there was no confusion about storage and memory capacity. It was even common that the drive capacity was a bit above the rated size, I guess not to cheat the customer of anything.
Then IDE arrived as a lower-cost alternative for personal computers. At the start, all was as before but after I started to see drives with 1000 as a base for size instead of 1024. I think it was Conner or Quantum that was the first to start this, but I can not guarantee this. I think these brands were new with the introduction of IDE. The traditional brands continued to use the 1024 base for a while before they also switched over. I am sure though that Hitachi was one of the latest to switch over and they gave you that little extra. I still have some 75GB drives and I think also some 80GB that is based on proper GBs.
But why did this change happened? I am quite certain that it's because IDE, in the beginning, was intended for the to a great degree computer illiterate consumer market and that someone with the first manufacturer to do this thought that by using 1000 based drives instead of 1024 they could sell slightly smaller drives for the same money and nobody would notice. And it seemed most didn't. I remembered that I thought it was highly immoral of the manufacturers to use fake KBs and MBs, so I avoided them and bought from honest manufactures that gave me the proper size. It looked very similar to someone selling using a slightly lighter pound or kg weight to cheat the customer, which is strictly illegal. But after some times, all had switched over.
Today this part of computer history seems to have been lost to almost all that talk about storage size. To me, it seems strange, as I observed it happening. It looked like something very close to fraud has changed the norm of the whole IT business so that now all people think is that there is a very strange difference between storage and RAM, while the history behind it should have been known.
Everyone's got that one friend who would actually buy this
Just to fill 2tb with 3 cod games
No I don't
me
I know its ridiculous but i so desperately wanna buy this... 😅
I would
I'mma tell you straight, chief
Even if I could afford the cost in price, I couldn't afford the cost in time to fill it up
This would be extremely useful and popular if they were able to sell below the $500 mark. When that happens is when ill move my 100TB of spinning rust over to SSD's.
@@nuwantilakaratna7157 Yeah, $3,200 is beyond too much for a single drive in the consumer space. It's another case of a consumer brand selling a enterprise product.
@@nuwantilakaratna7157 Yes, many things would be popular if you didn't have to think about the price. But if your already imagining such things, why not U.2 or M.2 and not bottleneck everything?
@@trelauney Because its hard to fit that many chips in that form factor, so its very unlikely? Me personally, SATA3 SSD speeds are more than enough for my archival purposes. If any company would even make a 3.5" SSD with that capacity for the same price as HDD's I would gladly buy it simply because of the greater lifespan/lower failure compared to HDD's.
Linus to his camera crew: WHY DID YOU LET ME OPEN A $4,000 SSD?!?!
He opened a $40.000 (the 100 TB SSD) some time ago
@The Amazing Popo Show now it was 40.000
@The Amazing Popo Show 40.000**
@The Amazing Popo Show 40,000*
@The Amazing Popo Show 40k*
The vindictive glee that he said "Yet" with was beautiful yet horrifying.
In the credits
Writer: "It is a mystery"
Me: "All right, then. Keep your secrets."
I'm sure "lord of the memes" had something to do with that
@Arnywar Yep. This was also to protect them from the comments section too, because they tend to see the negative comments a lot, like all the people who kept complaining about Jake.
Edit: Linus actually mentioned “Probation writer” in this video, backing up what we knew.
my guess is antherny or jake ( sorry if i mised up there name )
Its likely madison. They've been hinting at her being hired for a while now, and "Lord of Memes" kinda points to that.
@@mizinoinovermyhead.7523 Yarp. Also my guess. She will fit in with that hive of nerds. "big (O:)", indeed. That's a good hire served on a silver platter. And good by LMG to shield her from the weirdness that is us lot.
0:21 Never underestimate the size of a man's " homework folder"
Underrated comment
LOLOL you are a man of culture
As a teenager, I can confirm that that was indeed a bruh moment
I concede to this motion.
Bruh Rating: 6.5
I thought it was a bra moment lol
@@zyansheep Should be 7.8 since linus is a nice boomer
Wonder if that was written by the zoomer girl from the Rig reboot
FINALLY, a drive that can store up to 2 more COD updates!
For the first time ever, I have to say Microsoft did nothing wrong in this instance. All real systems use 1024 steps. The reason manufacturers of storage don't, is because it makes their storage seem larger. It's just marketing.
Agree with you there. Linus should know better. You would get the same in Linux.
Computing since the "dawn of time" has always been in binary or base 2 (1000 doesn't fit in base 2) 1024 does.
What does the data store in when you break it down Linus? That's right 1s and 0s.
Therefore
1024x1024x1024x1024 =1TB
Wait, so computers internally use powers of 2 right? That’s just how they work, no changing that, sure.
Still, wouldn’t it be better to make these units in the more human-comprehensible base 10 system when dealing with the human interface?
@@OGSumo yes they do. This is just the hardware manufacturers marketing spin.
Because 15.3 is better than 13.9
@@OGSumo N O
@@AnimeFan1981 Would depend on the linux, but several of them would show the units as "TiB", rather than just "TB."
And others, namely GNOME derived, don't do 1KB = 2^10 bytes.
Linus: This thing has more storage than your entire house
Me: ... **slides my pathetically small 50TB storage server out of frame** ... you're absolutely right.
You're probably jesting, but for a home NAS, don't worry mate, 50TB is pretty far from pathetically small.
about the same amount as Storage as my NAS.... you're so right, it feels pathetically small nowadays, considering I could fit all of that in 3 of those SSDs...
or a half exodrive, lol. Literally my entire 4U server in the palm of my hand. crazy.
Sadly, too expensive. So spinning rust it is.
Haha, yes. small NAS. *glances over to 1TB connected through USB to a RasPi3B+*
*laughs in nonexistent home server*
ugh, my NAS only have 24 TB, and they sing the spinning song every
now and then
Finally, a SSD that can hold both my games and all my hentai folders
xQcL
@@atharvtandale8958 love that Guy
*homework folder
Haha thats only half mine il need 2 for my hentai only
(¬‿¬)(¬‿¬)(¬‿¬)
"What will I do with all that storage??"
Wait 10 years, this will be a decent budget build, if you don't need a 'lot'.
agreed. but at that point who knows what will be the standard. I think in 10 years everything will be crazy. I'm starting to become a game developer soon since i finished my degree. atm age 20 so idk since i don't know much about old tech but it does get crazy generation after generation expecially from AMD and their ryzen stuff
me: wants one
looks it up: $3,199
me: nevermind
that is honestly less than i thought it'd be
For that price you can get the 15TB Samsung PM1733, which is a super-fast PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD... you just need to get a u.2 adapter card and cable to plug it in.
Atleast you not going to loose 15TB worth of unbackuped data if it fails.
@@Steamrick yeah but that card and adapter ain't cheap
Its ridiculous. I thought we would have 100 tb and 200 tb affordable ssd by now. But money
Linus: "The most ass looking sata cable"
Me: *Hides my tower's vents*
Did someone say vents?
Saaame
I have a pre build from 2001 looking inside xD as in... NO cable management and just s random assortment of loose cable etc xD xD xD xD
@@Mr3ppozz Mine's from 2010 and my cable looks just like the one he got.
@@shamarioscantlebury5891 awesome.. that's actually really nice and tidy compared to mine xD I wish I had the patience to clean it up but I honestly don't have the patience nor the interest to do it.... the exploded spaghetti mayhem doesn't really bother me xD
Before this vid, I always thought Gibybyte is just a cute way of referring to Gigabyte made by Jake (heard him say that in another vid)
Thanks Linus!
"More storage than your entire household"
*Laughs in Homelab*
Tf is homelab?
@@lueegy5899
They have servers and/or storage machines.
*Laughs in start up cloud services company*
@@SquareBiscuitProductions tf is startup cloud services company?
@@lueegy5899 well the name says it
When the *SSD* in your computer has more RAM than your actual RAM.
Damn bro, how old is your system? I thought 16GB to 32GB was standard.
@@moslem770 bruuh
@@fredsas12 lmao its not like everyone's livin off by leeching in momma's house lmao
@@hirokakhand6584 how does that relate to how much ram someone has? 16gb+ is like, standard
@@ppeez sure.You need a 400+$ laptop at least to achieve this
Finally, a contender for my 12.6 TB "Bible studies" folder
"bible studies"
@@lennymota4973 yeah its a hidden folder so his friends don't see it
@@lennymota4973 yeah its a hidden folder so his friends don't see it
"bible black studies" amirite
I actually just realised, not only are two 8TB QVO way cheaper, you can put both in a silent USB C gen 2 enclosure in raid 0 and get much better performance than this drive also.
"aimed at consumers" its 3.2k usd, thats aimed at rich consumers lmao
They aimed at consumers, too bad they're blind.
well consumer means someone not getting work to pay for it(and ofc enterprise) so creators would be consumers to since they are buying them by themselves
I wanna wear it on my neck
3.2k... that's like 3x my entire PC. Nice.
@@Olivia-W only 3
Me: has School
Linus: *UPLOADS*
Me: choice I no have
It's almost midnight here
What??
It's 19:07 here 😂
I’m in class and watching
Just turned my quiz in a minute late because of this 😀
Welcome to another Episode of can't afford but still watching!
old joke
@Strawberry Kiys _Zimbabwe, Post-WW1 Germany, Iran: I have seen that one_
I think the superior video editing on this one needs to be acknowledged. Bravo, sir/madame. 4:52
1:18 My textures finally loading in.
Lol
The Homework folder finally can remain uncompressed. Letsgooo
Im here 40% to learn from Linus and 60% to watch the Cameraman and Editors troll Linus. You guys are my heroes
*terraaa*
linus: “which isnt that good for todays standards”
me: wait what i get 10 mbps writes and 12mbps reads 😭
Bro you’re poor AF
Me : cries at 2mbps 😭
@@oliverxjsxhjxhs4487 ik lol
@@dizhamrl2502 wait 2mbps?
are those usb drive or something lol
I don't think I'd call something that costs $3,200 a "Consumer" drive.
I mean it could be for the right consumer
Linus: "What would WE do with it?"
My first thought: "Drop it?"
This joke is getting old
@@ItzEvolv Old but gold.
Update call of duty...
@@ClickItYT Put G at old
>more storage than your entire household
bold of you to challenge the datahoarder gang
The energy, the editing, the pace, the product itself - I love it! 🏴🏴🏴🏴
"Probably has more storage on it than your entire household"? Does Linus not know who he is talking to?
Can I please start a fight here? Please?
I'm small DataHoarder and still have 4 times as much.
Probably not, at least i got more, but not as Solid State.
only 9gigs in SSD storage, and another 12 in HDD and USB.
😅
th-cam.com/video/VOMooVpDMxE/w-d-xo.html
So what you're saying is that it's small but has a big package ( ͡• ͜ʖ ͡• )
Yes bro. Size doesn't matter.
That's what she said. 😏😏
Got them big BYTES
@@theinceptor3672 thats what she DIDNT say
😅
th-cam.com/video/VOMooVpDMxE/w-d-xo.html
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
I trained myself to detect linus' sponsor segways before they happen but i was not prepared for this one
doesnt work anymore, sometimes they are just utterly random. I actually am tempted to believe linus when he acts surprised about todays sponsor.
*segues
@@greyXstar yeah my bad
Alright we are finally there. I need like 10 of these then I can finally install all my Games / Steam collections.
Linus: "Why is it so slow?"
Me: **Laughs in HDD**
*cries
Yeah pretty much... 7500rpm HDD with 2tb aint it.
The drive was called Big (O:) to remind you of the algorithms needed to make something like this work
Some hard drives are still decent
@@mrcaboosevg6089 Yes, but an m.2 sabrent rocket is vastly superior to your average HDD.
Aimed at consumers
Consumer: “how will I afford all the games to fit on it after buying it”
How will you afford anything after buying this
@@datboi_wastaken9990 yeah nah that’s a lot of money knew it wouldn’t be affordable when it’s in this channel
Make more money
@@reptilez13 even if you had the money its a waste
This reminds me back in the day when they were crossing the 100GB threshold than 500GB, than 1TB. Wake me when we get to 100TB on NvMe.
Then*, Than is used for comparisons
I mean theres a 100TB in an ssd it's just $40k
I remember not having hard drives and booting from floppies.
And when a CD -ROMs held more than hard drives could.
That will be nice! But triple A games will be 10TB by then LMAO
@@7KingCobra7 lmao cod warzone rn
Tech moves so fast. I remember when a gigabyte of ssd was new and 4,8 and 16 mb thumbdrives just being the beez knees.
Linus: this thing probably has more storage in it than your entire household
Linus's house: *laughs in 10 petabytes*
"typical gaming computer"
Immediately spots 8 ram slots. Yeah I don't think so linus.
I have 8 ram slots.... only 2 are filled though 😅
Then you also don't have a typical gaming motherboard
also has Titan
@@markomclane475 why do you have that motherboard then? Just curious
@@yeahyeahyeah688 well 3 years ago I wasn't sure whether I wanted an i7 7700k or i7 6800k, I ended up getting the 6800k since it has 2 extra cores. The 6800k was an HEDT chip and used the x99a chipset. In other words, my cpu is essentially the cheapest workstation cpu from that generation, but it's overclocked and being used in a gaming pc. I paired it with a gtx 1070 and 2x8gb of ram.
Linus - “Thanks for nothing “
Carl pei- “ you’re welcome “
Sorry for the correction, but it's about 97% the capacity (1000/1024). So a 1TB drive will show as 0.97TiB (Tebibyte). As for the drive in question, yes that one comes out to about 91% the rated capacity, but I'm not sure why that would be. If it was truely 15.3TB, it should show up as about 14.9TiB in Windows.
Wow, the editing of the computer snap-in at 1:16 is top-tier.
Even i could do that lol
@@SynthaticBeats How? It makes sense if it were just a clean plate and they added the computer as another layer in post, but its a handheld shot so there would have to be tracking to keep it matching or rotoscoping. Either way it looks really clean. I can't see any roto or signs of content aware fill.
@@NAdoTEg i thought the same afterwards xd but i think you can acctualy see the edge of bothe frames in the middle becaus it gets blury for a second. So i would guess that the camera man just tryed his best to keep it still.
okay no its reaaaaaaaly weeelll made
2:42 Yes Linus, this qualifies as a certified BRUH moment
Bra?
Bra?
Thank you Michael scott
bra? take it off 😳
Now when will Ridgewallet finally redefine the Wallet? They’ve been trying for years
In fairness, they would succeed in doing so, if we all bought Ridgewallet wallets.
Unfortunately, all of us skip the sponsor with the double tap right arrow, and they are left forever trying...
@@klaxoncow Either that or we've automated the whole process, which is very easy these days.
@@no1DdC Sponsor Skip
@@realtimestatic mah nigga!
15.3TB is barely enough to store all my full HD and UHD films, music and photos. Currently using 14TB and 12TB drives but do look forward to affordable high capacity SSD, so long as it is very reliable.
Linus: here, an average 8 TB NVMe stick.
Also Linus, pointing to a box more than twice the size of the stick: 15 TB crammed in such a tiny enclosure, incredibile!
Let's just say that ssd is basically 2 sabrent rocket 8tb glued side by side
And downgraded m.2 to sata interface
Finally a ssd that can hold all my "homework"
Ah yes "Homework" 😏
@@BradElliot ah yes, the infamous “math” homework! Nothing special mom!
Henti
Some real calculus
@@Jantzku and some English, don’t forget about that
Since no one seems to be mentioning it...
7:11 The BSOD error code was SHREKFACE
LMAO
Look at the video's credits as well... Take a wild guess as to who's idea it was XD
4TB hard drives are around 100-150 Cad a piece. Which means you could buy a lot more storage capacity for a lot less, although not as fast.
Drive label: Big
Drive letter: O
I see what you did there. Big O, SHOWTIME!
O:
My Professor often uses the Big-O-Notation...
"This one's heavy."
~tosses it~
Linus, no!
Rip to the fellow who went out of their way to get a pink cable to match the LTT hat and got called out.
I have about 144 TBs of storage capacity. I archive loads of videos and have assets i use for 3d and video. Plus my render outputs are usually 4k 60fps 16 bit multilayer EXR files for animation. So trust me. For the normies 15 tb is alot, but for independent data buffs and indie production; more is always better.
ever since linus got that pink hat he’s turned into a different being
Windows for once is right: one byte is 8 bits, so it's correct to assume 1TB is 1024GB and not 1000GB
I thought everyone knew this
I think we can all agree, here you can not just blame Microsoft, its more of an issue with Computer Techs (+History) and the "SI - Unit System" used in Physics and everything else...
Its just that most people dont know that one Byte is 8 bits, and that changes everything.
Byte does not have a prefix, the SI prefixes used are base 10 and not base 2^10.
There is a reason Tebi and Gibibytes are a thing.
It boils down to the number base used to count... Humans use base 10 (1, 10, 100, 1000 etc.) while digital electronics tends to use base 2 (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024 etc.). Using base 10 is IMO a ruse to impress users with larger looking capacity.
Ngl, I'd download every movie I like in 4k, every single game, and all the music I would ever want. I would then put it on a laptop and never need wifi again.
"What about communicating with other people?"
"What ABOUT it?"
@@Bustermachine It's okay, no communication with people is something he's probably used to
@@hankhuevos3336 oof
I have been watching some videos and i was thinking about investing in Bitcon or Forex, But still don't know where to start from any recommendation?
BITCOIN IS THE ONLY TRUE DEMOCRACY
EVER EXISTS IN THE WORLD
How does this whole Bitcoin stuff work. I'm also interested in it, And willing to invest heavily in it.
But You can also make research on your own and start doing it yourself
@@benryan2353 Can one actually trade alone depending on his skill?..tried doing that but made a lot of losses.
I had a similar experience. But with Theresa William I recovered all my losses, My initial investment capital with her was $1,000 and i made $8,200 as profit in just the first week of trade. It was very big for me considering the fact that i have lost money in the past trying to trade on my own.
What you're saying is that Windows uses the original definition of a kilobyte being 1024 bytes, whereas the manufacturer uses the snowflake generation I-can't-do-math definition where they dumb it down and actually make it more confusing, as well as get to falsely advertise the drive to make it seem larger than it really is.
A byte is a measure of binary storage, and therefore must always be a power of 2, not a power of 10. All that storage space is is a bunch of transistors that either hold electrons or don't, either a 1 or a 0. That means that any amount of transistors will always have a total capacity that is a power of 2, period, end of story.
"why is it so slow?"
le with proud 1TB HDD for Windows and Steam Library
Same bruh
500gb gang
@@emailing amateur.
80GB Gang(HDD 3600RPM)
@@Arkeshan weak
50gb gang
(Aspire Cloudbook)
I didn’t realize how little 1tb is for steam games until recently
"Finally, I can store all copies of Knack in one place!" - Dunkey
Pfft, the editors wish dunkey would comment on their videos.
it can almost fit a picture of your mother on it
I disagree that windows likes to "think different" about storage. Most operating systems/software I have seen uses that same system for storage at least on a low level
Well, for example Gnome is fully aware that K means 10^3, M 10^6, G 10^9, T 10^12 and so on. KDE uses the 1024 increments, but it's using the Ki, Mi, Gi, Ti abbreviations, so they can count as well. It's just Microsoft's silliness, but that's probably the least annoying thing about that OS.
It's just that Windows uses the wrong abbreviations.
@@wta1518 false
@@nicholascopsey4807 Oh, so kilo now means 1024 instead of 1000 because "brilliant progammers" can't add an i?
@@wta1518 what’s 2^10?
Linus: “Why is it so slow?”
Me with my 7200RPM HDD: “I aM SpEeD”
me with my 3200rpm hdd: "DiSc Ro Ta Te"
my hhd is 5400rpm
Me with my laptops 64 gigabyte ssd “ZOoOOoooOoOoOoOom”
The whole kilobytes discussion is silly and I'm with Microsoft in this one: WE COUNT IN BINARY!
@@zxy7529 And they are using! The problem is that marketing people started using kilobytes as 1000 bytes.
And someone remember to create kibi to make sure that it's 1024.
Agreed. Microsoft is, and I don't get to say this too much, correct.
Yes, the real unit is 1024, not 1000.
Microsoft is in the wrong by the IEC Standard it is 1000 Bytes per Kilobytes becuse Kilo means 1000 and is based on 10s and is 10^3... Where as Kibi is based on 2 so it becomes 2^10 which is 1024...
physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
@@gosera-1108 the physicists have no business defining standards for computer scientists. I'm not defining the length of a meter and they shouldn't try to define the size of my datavolume.
I'm fine with a 512Gb SSD and separate terabyte HDD's. Lots of file and game storage on your HDD's and your demanding programs and OS go on the SSD. I happen to have a 1Tb SSD and 2x1Tb HDD's so all my games can be on the SSD. Storing games on a HDD usually doesn't affect performance, only loading times. Minecraft is an exception due to the generation of new chunks.
wow, after one COD update you'd probably have like 20 gbs left
That's why my COD update consists of bunch of uninstalls.
Yesterday we counted in gigabytes,
today we count in Warzones,
tomorrow we count in Prince of Persia remakes.
God tier comment
new writer. Come-on she's been on camera once already lets be real here this is her channel now.
She's doing social media management afiak
2:42
I haven't advanced yet - but I can already see you explaining "terabytes vs Trillions of bytes" AND how much overhead past that Windows has in formatting a drive.
I like how the drive is literally just named *big*
I think it's a reference to the Big O notation, the hard drive is called big and has the drive letter O
beeg yoshi
I think it was Madison and she was referencing the big oof that she had to explain to Linus back at ROG rig
Knowing LTT and given Linus' smirk, it's probably a reference to orgasm lol