Shame 80GB is the smallest drive you seem to be able to get now.
Sigh... you're making me feel really old. It seems like just yesterday that I was excited because I could get a
whole gigabyte of disk storage on my computer for less than a week's pay. Now you "complain" (I know you're not really complaining, just commenting) because 80 times as much storage costs about an
hour's pay. That's a cost per megabyte reduction factor of more than 3,000! Or take it to the extreme... I remember paying about what an 80 GB hard drive costs today for a box of twenty 360
kilobyte diskettes, for a cost reduction factor of 11,000. Or, most extreme example in my experience... the first computer I ever used, a Datapoint mini-computer in 1976, had a 5 MB hard drive that cost $8,000 and was so unreliable that the service techs lost money on a $12,000 annual service contract. If I crunched the numbers correctly, that Datapoint's cost per megabyte was 4,000,000 times as much as an 80 GB drive is today. Let's see... 80 GB drive, $32, that comes to $0.0004/MB. Can that be right? Four one-hundredths of a
penney per megabyte? 5 MB drive, $8,000, that comes to $1600 per megabyte. Yep, four million times as expensive.
And in five years we'll probably be wearing computers on our wrists with storage counted in terabytes, or perhaps a whole new paradigm where "storage" as such is an obsolete concept, analogous to saying "I have 29 million books in my house" when I have a link to the Library of Congress.
Time flies when you're having fun!
tanstaafl.