The business case for providing a robust desktop filesystem simply doesn’t exist anymore.
20 years ago, (regular) people stored their data on computers and those needed to be dependable. Phones existed, but not to the extent they do today.
Fast forward 20 years, and many people don’t even own a computer (in the traditional sense, many have consoles). People now have their entire life on their phones, backed up and/or stored in the cloud.
SSDs also became “large enough” that HDDs are mostly a thing of the past in consumer computers.
Instead you today have high reliability hardware and software in the cloud, which arguably is much more resilient than anything you could reasonably cook up at home. Besides the hardware (power, internet, fire suppression, physical security, etc), you’re also typically looking at multi geographical redundancy across multiple data centers using reed-Solomon erasure coding, but that’s nothing the ordinary user needs to know about.
Most cloud services also offer some kind of snapshot functionality as malware protection (ie OneDrive offers unlimited snapshots for 30 days rolling).
Truth is that most people are way better off just storing their data in the cloud and making a backup at home, though many people seem to ignore the latter, and Apple makes it exceptionally hard to automate.
What do you do when you discover that some thing you have not touched in a long time, but suddenly need, is corrupted and all of your backups are corrupt because the corruption happened prior to your 30 day window at OneDrive?
You would have early warning with ZFS. You have data loss with your plan.
Not with any proper erasure coded distributed filesystem, you just trash and replace the entire drive and let ceph or whatever distributed storage solution you use rebalance the shards from other nodes. You don't need the filesystem to be reliable on a device level, you just need basic checksums for integrity checking and enough parity on the cluster level to replace bad drives.
The business case for providing a robust desktop filesystem simply doesn’t exist anymore.
20 years ago, (regular) people stored their data on computers and those needed to be dependable. Phones existed, but not to the extent they do today.
Fast forward 20 years, and many people don’t even own a computer (in the traditional sense, many have consoles). People now have their entire life on their phones, backed up and/or stored in the cloud.
SSDs also became “large enough” that HDDs are mostly a thing of the past in consumer computers.
Instead you today have high reliability hardware and software in the cloud, which arguably is much more resilient than anything you could reasonably cook up at home. Besides the hardware (power, internet, fire suppression, physical security, etc), you’re also typically looking at multi geographical redundancy across multiple data centers using reed-Solomon erasure coding, but that’s nothing the ordinary user needs to know about.
Most cloud services also offer some kind of snapshot functionality as malware protection (ie OneDrive offers unlimited snapshots for 30 days rolling).
Truth is that most people are way better off just storing their data in the cloud and making a backup at home, though many people seem to ignore the latter, and Apple makes it exceptionally hard to automate.