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Is it true that WD really is lighter and faster than most other AVs?
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<blockquote data-quote="brigantes" data-source="post: 892726" data-attributes="member: 88084"><p>The internal combustion engine is considered legacy technology. Even with all the latest engineering and gizmos.</p><p></p><p>Legacy technology is that which is obsolete in one way or another. It can still be in use. It has nothing to do with support or scale of usage. Going forward there is very little improvement or growth. That's the industry definition of legacy. However, people here want it to mean something else.</p><p></p><p>HDD is only around today due to low cost. Just like cars, HDD OEMs have squeezed out tiny incremental gains in performance which meet the usage requirements (mostly data backup), but at the end of the day, HDD is like running in wooden shoes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="brigantes, post: 892726, member: 88084"] The internal combustion engine is considered legacy technology. Even with all the latest engineering and gizmos. Legacy technology is that which is obsolete in one way or another. It can still be in use. It has nothing to do with support or scale of usage. Going forward there is very little improvement or growth. That's the industry definition of legacy. However, people here want it to mean something else. HDD is only around today due to low cost. Just like cars, HDD OEMs have squeezed out tiny incremental gains in performance which meet the usage requirements (mostly data backup), but at the end of the day, HDD is like running in wooden shoes. [/QUOTE]
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