- Nov 11, 2004
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My thoughts are still in beta stages and definitely not a complete or deliverable product. However, I'd be interested in hearing your comments, ideas, or opinions.
I've been thinking about the ridiculous cost of SSDs, especially those based on DRAM/SRAM. And felt that manufacturers overcharge compared to other products using similar technologies.
For example:
Intel can sell a chipset with memory controller and SATA controller for about $30 including profit. Similar tech in ssd form usually costs well over $350 (excuding ram). Most of these devices use the SATA controller to feed their data to the CPU/RAM (EG Acard, HyperOS Systems, Gigabyte IRAM*) thus limiting their performance potential.
PCI-e PCI-L (legacy) based RAM SSDs use similar tech found on all motherboards and have been known to cost hundreds or thousands of dollars for a limited amount of storage.
If NVIDIA/ATI can sell graphics cards in PCI-e form with 2GB of HIGH SPEED RAM with Dedicated processor on a bootable add-on card for around $100. Why can't these "SSD Companies" do the same?
Well my idea is that someone (probably not going to be me) write a custom software package and/or bios for NVIDIA or ATi and use the GPU and RAM is a storage device for quicker loading of frequently used APPS like Firefox or a favorite game. Or offload the swap file on to the 2nd GPU-RAM.
I wouldn't advise anyone do this to their primary GPU but instead to purchase a low cost high ram capacity GPU to augment their primary Graphics card. Currently newegg.com has a 2gb graphics card for $84 and would make for a great test candidate. 2GB of high-bandwith storage with low cpu usage for under $100 sounds like a winning proposition to me.
*iRam costs less than $350 but has low capacity
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