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Spinning vs non Spinning5400 RPM drives are just about inaudible and work just fine. SSD's work as well, but their storage/$$$ ratio is not great if one's music collection is measured in terabytes. For those not averse to spinning drives, i would recommend the following:8 TB Archive drive from Seagate. When i get back to the States, am getting two of them along with dual hard drive chassishttp://www.amazon.com/Seagate-Archive-6GBps-Internal-ST8000AS0002/dp/B00XS423SC/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1463298133&sr=8-1&keywords=8+tb+archive+drivehttps://eshop.macsales.com/item/Icy%20Dock/MB662U32SR1/I have my mac connected to my television via HDMI to visually navigate my music libraries from across the room.A while back I picked up a Toshiba 14" USB travel monitor and have that connected as well, nice for when company comes over and they want to see what is playing on the system, and not have to have the big tv running.http://www.amazon.com/Toshiba-14-inch-Ultra-portable-Mobile-Monitor/dp/B005F0IKHAAnd no matter what playback software comes out on the market, i do try them all, i keep coming back home to Audirvana Plus 1.5 because it looks the least like iTunes and a computer program than any other I have come across. And before folks run for their rifles to hunt me down...my digital music library is just about 10TB. Software which necessitates loading collections as an indexed library become unwieldy with so much being loaded. I wish that were not the case.Right now about the only thing I would change is my Mac Mini it is a mid 2011 hence USB 2.0 and i have my eyes on a mid 2012 with USB 3.0, that extra speed of file transfer would be a godsend