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JUNE 11, 2007
How Flash Will Change PCs Faster, less power-hungry flash drives will see wider use as costs fall and capacity rises
The SSD is based on the same flash-memory technology found in the widely used USB memory keys. Where a conventional hard drive stores data on a magnetic disk that spins at up to 7,200 rpm, the SSD is basically a handful of chips with no moving parts. Flash has been around for years, but two considerations blocked its use for mass storage: cost and the fact that you could only rewrite your data a limited number of times. Even now, flash memory costs far more per megabyte than magnetic storage, but chip prices have been plunging. As for the limits on rewrites, manufacturers have greatly improved the situation by spiffing up the semiconductors and adding software that makes sure the data in any one chip location aren't changed too often. From a PC user's point of view, the benefits of moving to flash include greater reliability, lower power consumption, and faster performance, especially at startup. The shift to SSD could also enable the design of smaller laptops. And there would be side benefits: A ramp-up in flash memory across the tech sector would bring chip prices even lower, which would inevitably beef up the storage capacity of mobile phones, music players, and other handheld devices. For now, at least, there are significant drawbacks to the flash approach. The most important remains cost—close to $500 for a relatively small 32-gigabyte drive. That's about five times as much as a conventional unit. SSDs should get more capacious and much cheaper as their use expands. I TRIED TWO SSD-EQUIPPED laptops. One was a Dell (DELL ) Latitude D420 notebook with a 32 GB SanDisk (SNDK ) SSD as a $450 option. The other was a prototype subcompact notebook Samsung provided me, rigged with one of its own 32 GB SSDs. These two notebooks, both running Windows XP, showed a big performance gain, mostly in the form of faster boot times and, especially, faster wake-up from hibernation. They also gained a bit of battery life, perhaps 15 or 20 minutes on a charge. I'm not sure that's worth the extra cost, though there's a clear benefit in eliminating the mechanically fragile hard drive in a PC like the Dell ATG for rugged use, which also has an optional SanDisk SSD drive. While we wait for SSDs to get cheaper and more practical, flash-based storage will change PC designs in other ways. Windows Vista allows the use of hybrid storage that combines flash with conventional disk storage. The code and data used most often are moved into the flash memory while the big hard drive holds the information not being used at the moment. This should speed performance and lower power consumption by reducing the amount of time the disk must spin. Systems using hybrid storage should become widely available this fall. Vista also offers a poor man's form of hybrid memory. A feature called ReadyBoost will try to use free space on a USB memory key as temporary storage for programs or data. It's not nearly as fast as a real SSD or a hybrid solution, but it can provide a modest performance boost, particularly to programs that rely heavily on the hard drive. By later this year, most new PCs will probably use some kind of hybrid solution to help satiate Vista's hunger for processing power and memory. Pure SSD drives will take longer to hit the mainstream, mainly because of their cost. But they have great potential, especially because of the added flexibility they can give designers of small laptops and handheld devices. For past columns and online-only reviews, go to Technology & You at businessweek.com/go/techmaven/ By Stephen H. Wildstrom
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