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Flash Harddrives, nearly happening

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 19:59
by pixie pie
Whilst spying on the EVE forums, seems these guys were talking about them, and, well its probably one of the large wants for any UBER gaAImer.

http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=36706

Basically, Sandisk have released a 1.8" 32GB harddrive made entirely from Flash memory. Uses only 0.4W (Regular HDD 1W). Faster. No boot times etc.

Of course, it costs the bomb (And won't actually be available yet).

But this is where the future is at, especially with all the regular Harddrive manufacturers building Hybrid Drives for when Fista arrives.

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 22:38
by Woo Elephant Yeah
Not to mention they hardly ever get corrupt or fail like a normal hard disk does.

It all sounds like a good idea to me

Posted: January 4th, 2007, 22:47
by Stoat
Oooh. I thought hybrids were coming first. How fast is it to write to?

Re: Flash Harddrives, nearly happening

Posted: January 5th, 2007, 0:13
by Hehulk
pixie pie wrote:Whilst spying on the EVE forums...
Ah ha! So your the spy! :P

Posted: January 5th, 2007, 10:16
by spoodie
Stoat wrote:Oooh. I thought hybrids were coming first. How fast is it to write to?
There's a bit more information on the engadget site: http://www.engadget.com/2007/01/04/sand ... n-to-fall/
No info on write speed though.

Traditional harddisk are an old bottleneck that needs to be eliminated. Although I imagine there'll be around for a long time yet as they're cost effective for large data storage devices but for running speed critical stuffs these are the way forward.

Posted: January 5th, 2007, 19:20
by pixie pie
Write speed was on the link I gave:
The firm rates it as yielding a mean time between failure (MTBF) of two million hours, has a sustained read rate of 62MB per sec and a random read rate of 7,000 inputs/outputs per second.
I doubt these will be cheap enough for normal use, but I imagine one of these drives would be absolutely great for an OS disk. However the Hybrids are pretty good, because they'll put the data onto normal hard disks when it needs to; but its a lot more like having more RAM (well technically its HD cache) but it still looks fairly interesting.

Posted: January 5th, 2007, 19:43
by FatherJack
About time this technology caught up with OS size, I remember booting Win3.x and Win95 from RAMdisk back in the day and wishing there was a way to retain the data at power-off.

"In laptops early 2007" eh? I wonder whose? /prepares to fiddle figures for his companies recommended laptop supplier

Posted: January 5th, 2007, 19:48
by pixie pie
FatherJack wrote:
"In laptops early 2007" eh? I wonder whose? /prepares to fiddle figures for his companies recommended laptop supplier
Well as far as it looks like, its a typical 1.8" drive, so if they make a 2.5" drive, then you could slot it into any laptop? Hoping the power plug works on the Flash drive too. I'd imagine it would.

Posted: January 5th, 2007, 19:54
by deject
pixie pie wrote:Write speed was on the link I gave:
The firm rates it as yielding a mean time between failure (MTBF) of two million hours, has a sustained read rate of 62MB per sec and a random read rate of 7,000 inputs/outputs per second.
I doubt these will be cheap enough for normal use, but I imagine one of these drives would be absolutely great for an OS disk. However the Hybrids are pretty good, because they'll put the data onto normal hard disks when it needs to; but its a lot more like having more RAM (well technically its HD cache) but it still looks fairly interesting.
uhhh, if I'm reading this correctly, and I like to think that I am, the article only mentions read speed, which as most people know can vary greatly from the write speed.

Posted: January 5th, 2007, 23:32
by pixie pie
deject wrote:
uhhh, if I'm reading this correctly, and I like to think that I am, the article only mentions read speed, which as most people know can vary greatly from the write speed.
d'oh, my bad. Yeah write speed is likely to be slower, but for flash I think its fairly similar actually.

Posted: January 6th, 2007, 0:09
by spoodie
I'm glad it wasn't me missing something. I suppose write speed is not as important anyway, in the realm of PC gaming I mean.

Posted: January 6th, 2007, 0:21
by Dr. kitteny berk
write is probably as important for drives like these, as they're intended really to be page/swap files, but without the overheads of a HDD.