Samsung's Solid-State Disk Drive Unveiled 241
Iddo Genuth writes "After unveiling their upcoming hybrid hard drive, Samsung — along with a number of other manufacturers — is planning to begin shipping solid-state drives during 2007. Unlike the upcoming hybrids, solid-state drives should work with windows XP as well as Vista." The drives will be introduced in 1.8- and 2.5-inch form factors for notebooks. While streaming performance can't equal that of hard disks, Samsung claims that random-access performance is more important and that (e.g.) Vista users would see a 4x speedup in many key operations. Pricing was not announced.
Dedicated OS Harddrive? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:Dedicated OS Harddrive? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Hate to break it to ya (Score:2)
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Coming back out of "Suspend to RAM" (S3) on the other hand... is virtually instantaneous. And it works
Not on XP? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not on XP? (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, you must be new here. It's not that it wouldn't work, it just doesn't, you dig? No? Well, here's a Vista t-shirt.
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Re:Not on XP? (Score:5, Informative)
Obviously because Microsoft paid them a certain amount of money to make it an extra reason to force people to upgrade.
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Not that I imagine it will take long for Linux et al to come up with drivers and a better implementation than Vista does for this hardware (if it isn't already supported).
Re:Not on XP? (Score:5, Informative)
Hybrid drives, OTOH, are relying on two different technologies, and it seems the choice of using disk or flash is up to the OS. It means that if your OS isn't Hybrid-drive aware, you probably will end up with using the disk and losing its flash ability. Vista OTOH will be able to put some files on the flash part.
Re:Not on XP? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not on XP? (Score:4, Funny)
Sooo, no need to type one handed like the rest of us.
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+6 Funny (Score:2, Insightful)
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While a hybrid could function in XP with a driver, you can't get the magic (extra fast app and os load) without vista.
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As others have pointed out, they are standard connectors and would work with any OS basically.
Why 'Vista' is singled out, is Vista will recognize that it is a solid state drive, and use a 'different' set of cache and pre-cache techniques to get even more performance out of it than a regular OS would, by utilizing the drives random r/w speed over conventional HDs.
The
SuperFetch (Score:5, Insightful)
Seems nice in theory, but the first thing I do to any XP machine that someone tells me is running very slow is to kill those quick start apps in the bottom right corner. Their use of processor and/or memory definitely slows the machine down overall. I'd much rather wait an extra second for an app to load so the system runs faster overall.
So they better have improved their techniques with this SuperFetch. If it causes many more context switches or reduces memory available to apps people are actually running then it'll be a hinderance. At the very least it should be automatically turned off for systems with less than an ideal amount of memory.
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If it's done right, then it'll be handy. IIRC, linux uses free pages of memory for disk cache, and if an application needs more pages, it just invalidates the disk cache pages, and allocates them to the app.
If Windows caches applications into free memory pages during disk idle times, it'd probably make a huge difference, so long as it doesn't take memory away from the currently actively running applications.
Re:SuperFetch (Score:4, Interesting)
There is also a daemon on Mac OS X that dynamically prebinds applications that have not been prebound. One condition of prebinding is that all the Libraries must be dynamically linked and prebound themselves. If one dependant library is not prebound, then the whole thing gets marked as something "not to prebind."
To see the actual programs on Mac OS X, do a /usr/bin | grep prebinding
ls
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This is also on Linux but called prelinking.
Cheers,
Roger
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Here, I googled it for you: Channel 9 post [msdn.com] complete with illustrations [msdn.com].
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It's Microsoft, remember? They'll use superfetch to optimise Office and IE7 and a few OS functions.
Then they'll start making a big deal about Firefox and OOo being slower.
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You don't really seem to know what you're talking about (although I suppose that doesn't prohibit anyone from being "5, insightful" on
Those "quick start apps" you mention have nothing to do with XP, and everything to do with application writers who think you want their garbage running all the time. Those aren't just "pre-loaded" into memor
SuperFetch, or a 5 line shell script (Score:2)
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That's why I am more interested in the solid state and RAM drives that I have been seeing than in the hybrids. Those let me install what I want to them. Everything else can go on a traditional drive.
Maximum lifetime of flash... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Maximum lifetime of flash... (Score:5, Informative)
Two types of drives (Score:3, Insightful)
Backup early - backup often.
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Off topic, when did 32MB/s write speeds become slow? My new laptop gets about 30MB/s sustained (linear) write speeds, and I thought that was pretty impressive.
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30MB/sec is actually extremely good on a laptop drive. I bought the fastest 7200 rpm laptop drive available a year ago, and it can only sustain 19MB/sec.
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Reminds me of when... (Score:4, Informative)
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The solid state paging devices were great; the only problem was that they needed a driver written by (if I remember correctly) Cambridge University. The driver writers ran 6 months to a year behind operating system releases, so our operating system upgrades (VM/CMS) were held back. The vendors didn't care; they were the only game in town.
Fortunately, IBM released their 3380 drives around th
Solid State = Sexy (Score:5, Interesting)
Coupled will fuel cell technology, mobile computing is finally going to live up to its potential.
And I love this William Gibson quote from 1991:
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Battery life = not sexy (time) (Score:2)
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they'll have to run behemoths like Vista on the machine
That would be a good point were it not for the fact that in addition to the advances being made in storage, display, power, and all related technologies, there is a parallel evolution going on in the realm of software platforms. Microsoft may have a huge chunk of the market right now, but as even they realize, the OS as such is becoming increasingly relevant as the Internet becomes a full-fledged platform in its own right.
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"Pricing was not announced" (Score:3, Informative)
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Oh good! (Score:3, Funny)
So now this might get Vista running half as fast as every other operating system, right?
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Cheap Spinning Media has come a long way too (Score:4, Informative)
>Vista users would see a 4x speedup in many key operations.
Back in the day, we were seeing 10-20X improvements over spinning media in Random Access. 4x is almost not worth it, depending on price - give spinning media another year or two and they'll match that gain.
>Pricing was not announced.
Of course not, because it's going to be outrageously expensive!
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From the faq:
Q: How fast is your current SS
Better performance for email servers (Score:2)
Of course, the other posts about flash memory degrading after n writes would be something to watch, too.
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Yeah, well, some people don't want to loose the mail after retrieving it from the SMTP server. Then again, you would need to put the flash replacement drive in a RAID configuration as well to be completely sure. Besides that, you would need a 64-bit CPU and application to use more than 2 GB of RAM for some systems. But that's probably why the ":P" is there.
obvious problem (Score:2)
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Before you get one of those laptops, put your OS, applications and documents on the flash, and all the media on a 1.8" or 2.5" HDD drive on a (well-powered) USB port. If you use develop
Wouldn't a better focus be (Score:2)
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For servers and desktop, maybe... But for laptops it is impractical given the restrictions of keeping it powered.
Battery-powered RAM drive (Score:3, Interesting)
Seems to me that you could do RAM+flash; have it work as a RAM drive when "powered on", but then when powered off (either with the whole system, or by power management powering the drive down due to inactivity) it dumps the RAM to the flash, and restores the RAM from flash when powering up. You get better performance, and save rea
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Now compare the price of a motherboard + Operating system + 8GB additional RAM(for windows users mostly) and you see how efficient adding more RA
Kudos to Samsung! (Score:2)
I understand they (Samsung) are the largest manufacturers of television sets of any kind now. And their stuff is of quality. Kudos to them.
Viral Marketing Alert (Score:2)
What about security? (Score:2)
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Still not the complete solution. (Score:2, Interesting)
Here's an "Ask Slashdot" moment though: why do the heads need to move at all? Why isn't WD or Samsung or Hitachi building a long, length-of-radius head over each platter? Then the only motor needed is for the platter, and the head is merely a fixed unit? This would probably reduce most HDD crashes too, since the arm would no longer traverse the drive plane.
I dunno, there's bet
Applications (Score:2)
Useful for what applications? (Score:2)
The only answer that I could think of is anything that is 'write once, read many times'.
Movies - build a huge RAID array of flash drives an let them go to town on the lastest blockbuster.
TV - PPV system / VOD. New shows come on their own stack, plug them into the PPV system and be done with it.
Databases - certain table
Drives are big enough (Score:2)
Unless I'm missing some huge hidden folder, that means a 16GB drive would be plenty for most users as the OS+applications drive, unless (since I said "most users") Windows XP or Vista have become so bloated that they can't fit it all in even 16GB.
ATV GPS Computer (Score:2)
These drives wouldn't be affected by the bouncing and vibration like a normal drive would.
I could hold everything on a 16GB flash drive (Score:2)
Should change the software landscape... (Score:2)
If these drives become standard they'll have a huge impact on my day-to-day.
The most common point of failure in a desktop PC is the drive head smacking into the disk platter in a rotational-magnetic drive. The worst part of these failures is that your drive head runs a real good chance of being over your important data when it hits (because you access it often, because it's important), so you're much more likely to toast your critical ACT! database instead of the rarely used Typing Tutor Turbo III you do
Re:inflection point is coming (Score:5, Funny)
HEAVENS TO BETSEY!
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While I wouldn't doubt we see more devices in the upcoming years, hard disks definitely have a place, at least on home computers. I imagine it's rare that anyone with a full 100GB+ HDD has only programs and application data. Giant media files are commonplace, and reading/writing large files is the primary drawback of SSD, and something platter hard drives do very well and very cheaply.
I think what we'll probably see is computers starting to come standard with an "applications" ssd and a "media" hdd.
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Re:Bzzzt!!!! It uses flash ram. (Score:5, Informative)
Oh wait, this is
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I've never had a drive not last at least 10 years. Are drives today made of lower quality?
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Strange... the /. story doesn't say anything about it being flash ram. Not sure how you came to the conclusion that I didn't read the article.
Anyways, I know that R/W cycles have improved, but they still aren't at the point of lasting as long as hard drives, especially when portions of them are used for swap space, temporary files, and other virtual memory.
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Nice try though...
I know far too little about flash to comment on whether or not it is adequate to replace a hard-drive, but I do wonder on a modern PC how many times does a hard-drive really need to be rewritten to?
Back in the olden days of computers (as in not that long ago) few people had enough RAM to keep an entire program in memory so the OS was constantly swapping data between Memory and th
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It depends -- Are you using emacs?
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Well, there's a nice unqualified anecdotal opinion, it must be proof. On youe average corporate desktop with word and excel and powerpoint and outlook and whatnot the laptop will die long before the HDD. Your average coder's debug files don't make a dent, not even the salesmen's multi-MB powerpoint presentations. Maybe, if the desktop was used for the typical P2P "download, watch,
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Hard drives last many many times longer than that.
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And the flash will fail non-catstrophically, unlike the likely outcome for your hard drive should it fail.
Re:Bzzzt!!!! It uses flash ram. (Score:5, Interesting)
With load balancing, you wouldn't notice a failure until all the locations were rewritten just shy of 100,000 times. So the drive will "fail" in once you've written 40GB of data 99,999 times, or almost 4PB of write ops. At 13MB/s, that's just under 10 years of 100% duty cycle writes. If you presume you'll read that data once at 20MB/s, and you allow only an 82% duty cycle overall (to make the math easy), then your drive should last 20 years.
I don't know about you, but I don't have any 20 year old computers or drives. The computer I had 20 years ago (PS/2 model 30, iirc) used 720k floppies, and a 20MB hard drive was a $400 option. Wait, check that. I do have a copy of Windows 1.04 on floppy disk here. It fits on three 720k floppies.
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32GB, 32MB/s write speed, 57MB read speed. Assumed 100k cycles. 3.2PB at 32MB/s...8 years of service. I still don't have any 8 year old drives in my box-o-stuff, though.
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Re:Bzzzt!!!! It uses flash ram. (Score:4, Interesting)
1. Fill your drive 95%
2. Trash the remaining 5%. Your disk will now die in 1/20th of the time, that is a matter of months
IMO even that theoretical problem could be solved by active swapping, that is using some of your write cycles to move information internally. If you spent 100 of your 100k cycles doing that noone would notice. So when you're trying to trash those 5%, those 5% would swap places with the other 95%, even though there's no free space. For all I know maybe they do already, but if it was a problem that is the solution (this was sooo obvious. I bet it's patented).
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Now, it is only fair we look at the downside, which is this overplayed write issue. Let u
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*IF* Windows behaved properly.
It doesn't. It won't. No amount of wishing will make it so.
not likely (Score:2)