Originally posted by: aeternitas
Originally posted by: kmmatney
Originally posted by: aeternitas
Originally posted by: taltamir
I don't see how the main storage device will ALWAYS be the bottleneck... the new intel SSDs already blow away every hdd ever made... and are printed chips at 50nm... they are slated to be upgraded to 32nm soon for further awesomeness. The age of HDD bottlenecks is officially over.. now if only it was AFFORDABLE that would be super.
You dont see how? lol@ you not even understanding what youre typing. Officially over? Youre officialy an idiot. Unless you set up a RAID thats as fast as your RAM, the main storage will be the bottleneck. End of story.
I generally agree with you, but you still need to process the data after its received, so there will always be some bottlenecking by the cpu/RAM/motherboard. Tom's hardware tested the I-RAM drive, and windows boot-up time was still 31 seconds using 2 X 3.6 Ghz XEONs.
http://www.tomshardware.com/re.../gigabyte,1111-10.html
Personally, I can't wait for SSD drives to get to mainstream prices - it will definately be a nice boost in performance.
Indeed, for some processes where the RAM is feeding the CPU well, the CPU will be the natural limiter on performance (how it should naturally be). But thats far far off, and people talking about 50nm thinking that has anything to do with hard drive speeds getting close to feeding the CPU 100% of the time are daft!
Also, RAIDing SSDs is slightly different, as the more you have in a raid, the higher latency gets. So even if you wanted to get 20% of the bandwidth of normal DDR2 these days would up the latency 10 times or more. Now, for SSDs thats still nearly instant. I like to understand these things, because i like to appreciate the technology instead of being a fanboi like whom i was replying. If we start to believe hard drives are no longer the bottleneck, then the technology becomes stagnant and people do not invest into furthering technology, so I think of those people as hurting the bright future of new tech by being tards.
I for one welcome our (well preforming) SSD overlords.
Originally posted by: taltamir
That type of immature name calling does not dignify a serious answer aeternitas.
kmmatney... you generally agree with him yet post proof that he is completely wrong?
Possibly, but nor did I require one after responding to such an assinine post as his. If the shoe fits ect.
Also, he didnt prove me wrong, he brought up a good point that the hard drive isnt always the bottleneck. I agree. Generly though, the main storage will always be.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
It pleases me to see this manner of constructive discussion.
I will point out though in Martimus' defense he prefaced his pontification with the caveat "If accessing storage becomes fast enough...".
One could argue the timeline over which this will occur (decades, centuries, etc) and the technological barriers that must be overcome to make it occur, but saying it never will occur ("will always be" is strongly a worded post, zero tolerance for what the next 1000yrs of innovation will bring) is a tad unreasonable.
It?s just as reasonable (more so seeing the proof of the last 50 years of computing) as saying (if) x happens (no reasonable proof that it ever would) Y will happen.
Well if I had a million dollars I could hire someone to go smack him upside the head too. Saying it will never happen is unreasonable right? Be realistic. Also, assuming anything about 1000 years from now is ludicrous. I?m talking 100 years. We may not even be here in a millennia, and say silly things like that can lead to any sort of dreamt up theories without any real need to back it up with logic. Sure, SSDs are grrreat. But it?s pretty odd to think suddenly that bottleneck is a thing of the past. It will be the major factor forever if business has anything to say about it.
Unless my next copy of Vista comes imprinted on the L1 cache of my next CPU along with a reasonable amount of storage, then hard drives will be the bottleneck for the majority of what we do when accessing new information.
Having said that, then L1cache would turn into "main storage".