Where Does The Hard Drive Go From Here?

Flash or Hybrid Hard Drives will increasingly challenge conventional hard drives - but not at high capacities.
This is a rather interesting question, as there have been several developments that clearly blur the future of mass storage. On the one hand, there have always been so-called "solid state" drives. Traditionally, these have been hard-drive-like products created with silicon memory and some sort of battery buffer. These products are extremely fast, but they’re likewise expensive and exclusive, and so not suitable for the mainstream. But there are two technologies threatening the traditional hard drive domain: Flash hard drives, which are based on non-volatile Flash memory, and so-called hybrid hard drives (H-HDDs). The latter are traditional hard drives that also have an additional Flash memory bank that can be used to store OEM application data or frequently used operating system files.
Hybrid hard drives are meant to speed up system startup by reading from the Flash memory instead of the slower mechanical medium. The latter can also be disabled when the hard drive isn’t required to spin. Flash hard drives such as the SATA5000 by Sandisk aim to replace all moving parts by fundamentally faster Flash memory lineups, which became an option due to continuously increasing Flash data densities.
However, hybrid hard drives suffer from immature operating system support. At this point, hybrid hard drives do not deliver substantial benefits, whether in the form of longer battery runtime for notebooks (the hard drive spindle motor can be shut down as long as the hybrid hard drive operates with its Flash memory) or by delivering better performance. At the same time, buying a hybrid hard drive instead of a conventional one certainly isn’t a bad thing. It is certainly the way hard drives are going, but it will take time once they’re supported before they finally make some sense.
Flash hard drives will get better and better with every generation. While early models are limited to 32 GB for cost reasons, and they still haven’t beat the conventional hard drive in many benchmark segments, the upcoming generation will deliver data rates that compete with the latest 7,200 RPM desktop drives. The only issue that cannot be solved by smart engineering is data density: Flash hard drives will be limited to 64 and 128 GB for the time being - unless you’re willing to spend four digit amounts on a hard drive that still won’t even hold as much as current notebook drives at 250 GB. But accelerated Flash technologies will eventually find their way into Hybrid Hard Drives.
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Looks like you've forgotten to remove the SATA 1 limiting jumper from the rear of the drive from the interface bandwidth results - mine gets over 200MB/s with the jumper removed.
spelling is rubbish on toms articles now.
i know, look how it says:
Samsung told us earlier this year that capacities between 1 and 2 GB should be available rather early next year
instead of "1 and 2 TiB"
almost as bad as your spelling of gangster
does it say anywhere how much these cost?
and where is gangsta misspeling in his post?
Dobby, Hard disks are sold in GB/TB units, not GiB/TiB
Darkstar
If you can't cook don't go in the kitchen...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tebibyte
Spuddy
Can't you read dobby was referring to the spelling of Gangster as "Gangsta".
Don't you all think the class of THG readership is dropping at the same rate as the authoring abilities of the THG staff... I don't know what to think personally...
heh heh :-)
Bob
P.S. All I care about with harddisks is quality control and warranty. Lets have more info on the former please!! (Perhaps THG could send in spys to work in the Chinese sweatshops that produce your precious drives for only 4.50USD equivalent per day - http://www.worldsalaries.org/china.shtml)
Any user experience with the wetern digital 1tb drive? Mine works sometimes but more often is extremely slow 12mb/s when copying from another internal SATAII drive on vista system - unusable!
Any user experience with the wetern digital 1tb drive? Mine works sometimes but more often is extremely slow 12mb/s when copying from another internal SATAII drive on vista system - unusable!
Hi m671
Install a real OS and maybe we could help you get to the route of the problem... Just kidding!! But seriously how do you expect anyone to diagnose your problems without any useful information (like your RAM size/timings, what controller you are using for the drives, what motherboard you are using and what CPU)...
Bob
P.S. I wouldn't touch the WD 1TB HD... If they can't give them a 5 year warranty then they obviously don't believe they are built to last... I will stick with Seagate despite their recent decline in manufacturing quality (maybe they are trying to hit a median level with Maxtor - lol).