Hi all,
With USB flash drives reaching 4 GB nowadays, how long would it take to see the first harddisk replacements based on flash technology?
I've heard there are some technical issues with how many times a flash chip can be rewritten. But that seems easy to solve: Logic could be added to relocate data to less used locations. So all locations age at the same rate, and it's predictable when the drive will start to fail. Furthermore, cache memory consisting of several MB of volatile RAM (cheap and slow is ok) could be added. Relatively small but frequently written data can be located here. When powered off, a capacitor or small battery has to write this data back to flash.
Obviously such things are already in use to a limited extend, but could we see it come to the consumer markets soon? The reason why computers are still as slow at loading applications as decades ago is clearly because harddisks are too slow for today's intensive use and bandwidth requirements. With a flash drive latencies would be immensely lower, and transfer rates can reach new levels because data can be read/written in parallel to different chips.
Any thoughts?
With USB flash drives reaching 4 GB nowadays, how long would it take to see the first harddisk replacements based on flash technology?
I've heard there are some technical issues with how many times a flash chip can be rewritten. But that seems easy to solve: Logic could be added to relocate data to less used locations. So all locations age at the same rate, and it's predictable when the drive will start to fail. Furthermore, cache memory consisting of several MB of volatile RAM (cheap and slow is ok) could be added. Relatively small but frequently written data can be located here. When powered off, a capacitor or small battery has to write this data back to flash.
Obviously such things are already in use to a limited extend, but could we see it come to the consumer markets soon? The reason why computers are still as slow at loading applications as decades ago is clearly because harddisks are too slow for today's intensive use and bandwidth requirements. With a flash drive latencies would be immensely lower, and transfer rates can reach new levels because data can be read/written in parallel to different chips.
Any thoughts?