I just saw an article online (which I'll link to below), concerning a new high capacity SSD that is about to be launched.
And it got me thinking. About 1989, I bought a Seagate 20 Mb MFM hard drive and thought that was very capacious (having to that time booted into DOS via a 5 1/4 floppy drive).
Soon after that, I got another Seagate drive, this time a 40 Mb. But that was it as MFM only supported 2 hard drives. In the early 1990's I then switched to SCSI drives and got a Quantum 270 Mb drive and an Adaptec AHA1542 adapter. More SCSI drives followed, mostly more Quantums and I soon had a small array of 540 Mb drives (though NOT connected in RAID, as I couldn't afford a RAID adapter !!)
Over the next few years, I upgraded, bit by bit and, like most people with PC's we're now talking Gb drives, for not a lot of money. And recently I got a 5 Tb "spinning rust" external drive (as an "archive" device) for about 30 cups of Costa coffee...
But it seems that's not enough....and Seagate will soon be making available: a 60 Tb SSD...



http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/08/09 ... _60tb_ssd/
Of course the problem is that to backup such a drive using my 1.2 Mb floppy drive is going to take simply AGES !!!
**UPDATE**
It seems Toshiba have just trumped Seagate, by announcing plans for a 100 Tb SSD
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/08/10 ... b_qlc_ssd/
regards
Tim