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2008, The Year of Solid State Storage
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Mon Jan 14, 2008 10:12 AM
from the owe-me-a-solid dept.
from the owe-me-a-solid dept.
An anonymous reader writes "At CES, SSD drives were a plenty on the show floor. "Some companies said we could see 250GB SSD units by the end of this year, while others predicted it could take up to a couple of years for them to become mainstream. None of the companies promised mainstream adoption, but they promised a bright future and we are inclined to believe them. High capacity drives are going to be expensive due to their very nature of early technology and gradual adoption rate."
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Submission: 2008: The Year of Solid State Storage by Anonymous Coward
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Lets try the other way around, eh (Score:5, Insightful)
I think they have that backwards. Lets try High capacity drives are going to have a gradual adpotion rate due to their very nature of being expensive due to their being early technology
There, that's better.
I'd have one now ("be an early adpopter") if they weren't so bloddy expensive.
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Re:Lets try the other way around, eh (Score:5, Informative)
Well, flash storage certainly is better in the space environment. Conventional hard-disk technology requires a pressurized compartment (the heads stay separted from the disks with a thin film of air). And, of course, any technology with no moving parts is preferable-- mechanical parts have an annoying tendency to freeze up with vacuum thermal cycling.
Spirit and Opportunity are now four years into their 90-day mission on Mars, running on flash storage....
Parent
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Current consumer flash-based hard-drive replacements are still slow as shit. Yea, you could do it all crazy with 250 1GB sticks to achieve good performance, but those are already available and they cost HUGE DOLLARS.
I realize that eventually, Flash will catch up and could very likely replace hard drives. I think it sounds wonderful
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There's only one problem: this SSD drive costs about $5000.
So we have the technology, we only need to wait until prices come down to reasonable values.
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Err yes, in fact, that's exactly what it does.
It uses multiple heads to achieve higher rates by reading/writing all the platters at one time.
No. It was attempted, I believe by Seagate in the first Barracuda drives, but it was quickly abandoned. The only way it can work at modern capacities is if you added a drive motor and independent electronics per head. Doable, but it's cheaper to just b
Re:Lets try the other way around, eh (Score:4, Insightful)
Hard drives are actually vented. There's no pressurized compartment. They run at the same atmosphere as the rest of the machine.
Parent
Re:Lets try the other way around, eh (Score:5, Interesting)
Once that happens, I imagine that magnetic drives' usage will tail off sharply, and disappear within a couple of years, because nobody (or at least nobody worth speaking of) wants to use magnetic over solid state anyway. In fact, it might start happening even whilst SSDs have a small price premium.
God knows, I'd be happy to pay a 20% premium to never have to use magnetic hard drives again.
Parent
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Re:Lets try the other way around, eh (Score:5, Funny)
Already that magnetic drives weren't all that good [slashdot.org] to start with...
Parent
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-Lars
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-Lars
So we are back to RAM drives! (Score:4, Interesting)
I used a RAM drive on my Amgia way back when. Yes I know that they are how using flash but it does seem very familiar.
I wonder when we might see a hybrid flash-ram drive? A big bunch of ram for high speed and flash for permanent storage. Just use a super cap for a power backup and have it copy the ram to flash on power down. A little bit pricey but if you need the speed you need the speed.
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It has been that way for a long time it is called a cache.
but the cache isn't as big as the drive.
Flash is actually slower for writes and has limited write cycles.
True, but flash chips in parallel (the way SSD are made) make that less of an issue. Sort of how certain RAID configurations can speed up disk access times. Samsung [samsung.com] quotes maximum write speeds of SSD higher than equivalent magnetic HDD. Even the MTBF numbers are much much better for SSD. Of course the write speed is the maximum-guaranteed-never-to-exceed number the slowest write may very well be slower than the slowest HDD write.
What I was imagining was using a ram drive for reading and writing data and then backing that up to a slow flashdrive when you powered down the drive. On power up You could pre cache the ram or just use it as a very large cache.
I see, that would be a very fast drive (once all of flash has been read into
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But isn't this pretty much what we have now for every drive we use? The only difference is that the "high-speed RAM cache" is located in the unused portion of your computer's RAM, instead of being part of the drive itself. I'm not sure what the advantage of putting another cache inside the drive itself would be; why not spend the money adding more RAM to your computer instead... that way
within 5 years, tape manufactuers will have troubl (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:within 5 years, tape manufactuers will have tro (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Re:within 5 years, tape manufactuers will have tro (Score:4, Insightful)
SSD's would have all the advantages of tape (portable, easy to load, etc) without the mechanical problems that tape has. Wow, I need to patent this now!
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Re:within 5 years, tape manufactuers will have tro (Score:5, Informative)
I'd give it a good 10-15 years before our massive tape storage units disappear from the datacenters.
Parent
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The price per GB will continue to fall, so magnetic storage will be more cost effective. Of course there are other advantages and disadvantages to both.
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apple (Score:5, Interesting)
The sales guy at the Apple store told me that there was a persistent rumor of a solid state laptop coming in the next few weeks...
Boot camp + solid state = me finally replacing the old powerbook!!
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P.S. My Mac Mini rules
Sequential reading? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Sequential reading? (Score:5, Informative)
I don't think people realize just HOW slow drives are compared to the rest of the machine. Sure we programmers know the disk is "slow" but it really puts it in perspective to know it's a 100000 times slower than an alternative tech.
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I dont see it (Score:3, Interesting)
In the enterprise sector... forget about it... Even SATA drives are becoming ideal for storage solutions, and a simple raid-5 will max out the cap of a raid controller's bus.
So in other words... I don't see it.
Re:I dont see it (Score:5, Insightful)
-Lars
Parent
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-Lars
Wait... (Score:2, Funny)
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Virtually there with the Eee PC anyway.
Reports I Continue to Hear (Score:4, Informative)
Until that time is years, instead of weeks, I don't see myself preferring more expensive, or even equal cost SSD, over rotating media drives.
It's not just for laptops... (Score:2, Informative)
Say no to moving parts (Score:3, Interesting)
Hopefully computers will be completely free from moving parts in 10 years or so. Now that would make it interesting for laptop owners.
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EMC Solid Storage Array just anounced. (Score:2, Informative)
SSD as a boot drive (Score:5, Interesting)
Not only is the flash drive completely silent, it is reasonably fast. Reads always benchmark at 40MB a second and writes benchmark at 34MB a second.
I've been a bit worried about the flash wearing out after repeated writes, but so far so good. Since my mythtv mysql installation is stored on it, as well as the normal system log files, I'm sure it sees quite a lot of action.
But to my point...
One common problem with systems such as mythtv that are under heavy IO stress is that during these moments of stress (lots of recordings going on at once) the whole operating system grinds to a halt or at least becomes sluggish waiting on some needed IO.
It was very common on my old mythtv setup where I used the extra space on the OS hard drives as extra storage space for mythtv recordings. I'm not experiencing any of that sluggishness with the new setup.
This has got me thinking that for my future desktop system, maybe instead of getting a raptor for the OS drive, and a large, slower hard drive for the rest of my stuff in order to minimize IO bottlenecks, I should swap out the raptor for a 16GB SSD for the OS drive. I'd end up with something that has almost no latency, good speed, silent, and it may be possibly just as reliable in that role.
What do you think?
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These disks still have a problem with speed on random write though. It's nothing for read-write databases where NCQ (SATA2) disks are faster.
Solution for /var activity (Score:3, Interesting)
Flat panel/CRTs all over again (Score:3, Informative)
Ask Slashdot (Score:3, Interesting)
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