Hard Disk Drives (HDD) have been the top leading for the storage of media and files, but the Solid State Drives (SSD) seem to be gaining more ground, as it is now more in use in the new laptops and notebooks. The storage media technology has surprisingly improved drastically across decades, considering the advancement from the use of conventional punch cards which could save only 960 bits’ data to the floppy disks, such as CDs and DVDs, also to the hard disk drives and solid-state drives.
This article will be focusing on the major differences between HDDs and SSDs. For storing and retrieving data, HDDs make use of magnetic storage to do that, while SSDs persistently store data on solid-state flash memory. When it comes to their storage capacity, HDDs can contain two terabytes for notebooks, and ten terabytes for desktop computers, while SSDs cannot contain more than one terabyte for notebooks, and four terabytes for desktop computers. SSDs are cheaper than HDDs.