October 12, 2007 8:30 AM PDT

FlashMate turns hard drives into hybrids

by Matthew Elliott
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(Credit: SST, Inc.)

A hybrid hard drive can help a laptop boot faster, operate more effectively and quietly, and run longer on a single battery charge. Flash memory maker SST and firmware/BIOS company Insyde Software announced earlier this week a technology they're calling FlashMate that gives standard hard drives hybridlike functionality. Actually, it does more. Whereas hybrid hard drives use flash memory as a data cache when a system is running, FlashMate will let you access the full contents of your hard drive without needing to power on your laptop. Using a combination of hardware, software, and firmware, FlashMate creates an application subsystem that's separate from Windows so you can, for instance, delve into your MP3 or photo libraries and check e-mail (send e-mail, too?) without waiting for Vista to boot. And with Vista's ReadyDrive feature, FlashMate can bestow hybrid functionality on plain, old hard drives. FlashMate will also work with Vista's SideShow feature, presumably letting you access more data and applications than you can now should your laptop include a small, secondary screen on its lid. SST expects to begin selling FlashMate products in Q2 of next year; it remains to be seen how quickly laptop manufacturers may adopt the technology.

Matt Elliott, a CNET editor since 2000, heads up coverage of computer hardware, from desktops and laptops to their assorted components and peripherals. Prior to joining CNET, he worked for PC Magazine. When not writing about computers and wrestling with their shipping boxes, he likes shooting with his Nikon D50 camera. Matt is also skilled with a tape gun. E-mail Matt.
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Awesome computing tech devices potential
by ghostridermn2k3 October 16, 2007 12:49 AM PDT
This technology has the potential for really increasing not only the life of a laptop in terms of power length for listening to MP3s or doing email or document editing, but also for making it last longer in terms of even further Harddrive lifetimes, and making a laptop even more durable if the harddrive is powered down even more often. From the standpoint of a near instant powered on access, to far longer usage lifetime, and made even more durable, this technology has fantastic potential to improve current laptops greatly.
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