Comments on: Dell first: 256GB solid-state drive on laptops
Dell is offering one of the largest-capacity solid-state drives to date in its XPS laptop line.
Dell is offering one of the largest-capacity solid-state drives to date in its XPS laptop line.
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Brooke Crothers has served as an editor at large at CNET News, an editor at Dow Jones' Asian Wall Street Journal Weekly, and a senior editor at InfoWorld. His CNET blog covers chip technology and computer systems, and how they define the computing experience. He also contributes to The New York Times' Bits and Technology sections. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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I predict that in about 2 years that SSDs will have largely made the 1.8" HDD market largely obsolete and the SSDs will make up a significant percentage of the 2.5" market. SSDs have already killed the market for micro HDDs(eg. 0.85"/1"). 1.8" used to be popular in MP3 players, but as the price on solid state drives have fallen their use has declined. Due to the much higher prices on 1.8" HDDs compared to 2.5" HDDs and because SSDs scale down better than HDDs I think you will see the 1.8" HDDs rather before people even seriously talk about SSDs dominating the 2.5" form factor.
Precluding some unforeseen obstacle to SSDs becoming cheaper or some dramatic need for additional storage I see SSDs to become popular for mainstream use in 3-4 years and the dominant form of storage technology in 5-7 years. Mechanical HDDs will linger for some time, but I don't think SSDs are going to take as long as some of the cynics think.
At the Apple sight, Today, you can order the Flash drive on the 18 inch Macbook Pro.
I'm also sure you meant that the Apple site has 17", not 18" Macbook Pros with this option. The article does point out this fact.
As someone who used to work in a Fujistu clean room repairing hard drives, I can tell you there's a lot of equipment and experience necessary to do hard drives right.
Picking out a controller, some ram chips and making some circuit boards, some soldering - that could be done in your garage - not that you'd want to. Not very R&D intensive either unless you're one of the big guys doing the actual research.
SSD's are long overdue but I think technologies like attaching storage directly to the PCI-Express bus like Fusion I/O and others do is the way to go. (Not that I can't afford it.) Why wait for the 3-4 year wait between upgrades to SATA speed when we can have it now?
How much longer will we be needing a separate 'Hard Drive' storage bus considering the amazing results to be had simply by using those same chips in a design that takes advantage of the existing PCI-E bus?
In the meanwhile, with the higher capacities being available and coming down in price, the smaller SSDs get cheaper too. 64 gigabytes is more than enough to hold your operating system and applications, so now even the person who craves speed but doesn't have a huge amount of money can access this technology.
My next build: /home on HDD, / on SSD. It's the way to go.
He was only making an observation, and I have to back up the likelihood that someone who can afford seven, fully loaded laptops at once would likely have at least passable grammar. I also believe the post is questionable.
- by Jaayd January 20, 2009 3:39 PM PST
- Give the children in college the help desk phone number. They need to learn how to deal with this now.
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