hendrikfromboston wrote:
The question wass not to confirm it (like a AI chat bot) but to rather present options if there are any as the question was: "What other Hierarchical storage options are there"!
If not, then a silence would be more... pronounced than stating the obvious we already know ;(
I didn't know it. And you didn't make any statement other than "it appears". I confirmed it, if only for my own assurances, by comparing man pages.
This is a discussion forum for users of Apple products. AI content is frowned upon. But generally speaking, you can't dictate what people can or can't say as long as it's within the Terms of Use. This is an interesting topic as I've used real hierarchical storage systems before. I was a long time ago and forget what kind it was. It was something that Oracle eventually bought out.
Yes, Apple might be consumer focussed, but that doesn't mean that professionals (not enterprises) do want to us it in ways to make their lives easier, not more cramped in and police-state-controlled as is the route that this is suggesting Apple is taking.
I haven't heard of any masked Apple agents performing no-knock raids on small businesses to confiscate their illicit homemade fusion drives.
It is quite monopolistic in their actions but that is my opinion, as to not allow and remove "easy" options (without making it an announced discontinuation notice) for people that is power users... yes still consumer, but more power than normal users ;(
Apple rarely announced any discontinuations. The few times that they have, they typically do it nine years in advance. Everyone ignores this. Then, nine years later, Apple disables the feature. People get all upset, exchange notes, and figure out which plist they have to hack to re-enable the feature. Then they go back to sleep for 10 months. And then the wailing and gnashing of teeth begins in earnest when Apple actually removes the capability altogether. This has happened multiple times. You can set your clock by it.
Apple's Fusion Drive configuration was only ever intended to support Apple's Fusion Drive. It's wasn't designed for JBOD hierarchical storage systems. There's nothing to stop anyone from developing their own hierarchical storage systems. Well, other than the fact that there's no money in it. From a 3rd party developer's point of view, Apple's doing us a favour by discontinuing the freebie option. But it's really not a good idea for a product. Hierarchical storage has been long-since replaced by cloud storage. In most cases, you can just download the needed files faster than you could load them from tape.
You're correct that there is an "in-between" market of people who can't handle cloud storage and want something better than a NAS. But this is a very tiny market. It's not fun to be in a tiny market. Even on Linux, HFS seems to have been forgotten about.