Read more.Toshiba has developed what it claims is the world?s first 512GB 2.5in solid-state drive.
Read more.Toshiba has developed what it claims is the world?s first 512GB 2.5in solid-state drive.
£2000 I say, possibly more
Can't wait for these to start becoming more mainstream and cheaper.
hmmm, seems a load of tosh to me.
/me gets coat
do SSDs still have their read/write limit?
cos surely if these are to be used in a laptop, having them as the only drive will mean they have a very short lifespan?
but the introduction of higher volumes drives may gradually start to reduce the cost of smaller ones, i didn't say its happened i said its happening.
The obstacle they face is that magnetic drives are so cheap people arnt buying into the newer technology so there isnt enough pull from the market for them to go into serious mass production.
the way SSDs are going atm, we're gonna see 5TB on 1 SSD very soon.
how long did it take for HDDs to get from 80GB to 500GB?
i'm all for supporting SSDs and think they're a great idea, just don't think anyone has the money.
Which would be great!
To get that quantity of data in one SSD, you would need to increase the density of the cips inside them.
This photo is a good illustration:
That little board will be the same on 1.8" drives and 2.5" drives. Assuming they stick to this form factor, they are limited to 64MB chips. If they were to get 128MB chips to produce a 1TB SSD, they could also produce a 128MB SSD for around the same price as a current 64GB SSD.
All thats over simplified, but you get the idea I'm sure
Can't wait to stick a few of these in a RAID 5 array
Yes, it's a classic chicken and egg problem, as far as getting the price down. But that still doesn't alter the fact that the technology is inherently detrimental to data. You wouldn't use a filesystem that started randomly placing flipped bits on certain blocks after a few thousand writes. And that's pretty much what you get with SSD.
Or, looking at it another way, you wouldn't use a filesystem that had lots of mechanical moving parts which, when it *does* pile over often results in total data loss. And that's pretty much what you get with HDD. And so we have redundancy in RAID, and backup solutions. Would having SSD negate those? Probably not. The USPs are speed, shock resistance and power consumption I guess. My (limited) experience of SSD is positive though - and that's very much at the low-end of the market.
Sadly, there probably isn't a file storage medium out there that's ever going to be absolutely safe - at least not for us mere consumers.
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