


Samsung Announces Flash-Based Disk Drive 378
doc6502 writes "Samsung has announced flash-based disk drives with a 16 GB capacity, with an aim to get the drives to market by the end of the year. The (short) article suggests that this could be a big boost to laptop owners, as battery life could be seriously extended if there isn't a big high-speed motor to power constantly. The drives should be fast, too."
Old News (Score:5, Informative)
Memtech [memtech.com] has been doing this sort of thing for a while now.
Still, this is great news...the more companies that switch to flash technology, the more the technology itself will become mainstream. It's about time we did away with platter-based HDDs.
No SATA? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No SATA? (Score:3, Interesting)
This is not news. My employer, Adtron, has been doing flash based "disk" and "tape" drives for years. And we were the first (and only?) with SATA: http://www.adtron.com/products/A25fb-SerialATAFla
[/shamelessplug]
Samsung announces and everyone goes gaga. Little guys do it for years and no one seems to know about it. [shrug]
Re:Old News (Score:2)
Re:RTFA (Score:3, Funny)
50% Overrated
50% Underrated
Now that's Slashdot!
Re:Old News (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Old News (Score:5, Insightful)
Samsung could also use a form of wear leveling [wikipedia.org] to increase device longevity.
Re:Huh? Bad Math?? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Old News (Score:5, Funny)
Yea, they have the 35 inch SC3500 Sidewinder [memtech.com]. Imagine how much data you can put on a disk that big!
Re:Old News (Score:2)
Heh...yeah, that is a big drive.
I missed that when I originally went through their website...thanks.
Mod parent up, please.
Re:Old News (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Old News (Score:3, Informative)
1. Isnt flash media more suceptible to EMP? Wouldn't it be easier to damage with static electricty? What about common magnetic feilds?
2. In the event of a hardware failure with a traditial hard drive you certainly can get get some of you data back given a clean room, a microscope and time. What can be done to recover data from a hardware failure on a flash drive?
I'm going to hold on to my hard drives until I'm comfortable with the answers.
Re:Old News (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Don't throw away your drives yet.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, competition breeds advancements. Once they hit the 32 or the 64gb mark, the race will be on to build really huge solid state disks.
Personally, I think the spining platter has outlived it's welcome and it's time for it to go...
Re:Don't throw away your drives yet.. (Score:5, Funny)
I suddenly feel very old.
Re:Old News (Score:3, Interesting)
Your 100ma figure is from 14 years ago, I hardly think it is valid today. Besides, 100ma is still better than current HDDs.
I have only two concerns about these news drives. First, cost, since even 4GB is prohibitively expensive today (Only affordable way to get some i
Announces?! (Score:2)
Re:Announces?! (Score:5, Funny)
Anita, this is Flash Drive; Flash, this is Anita.
There, better now?
Re:Announces?! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Announces?! (Score:5, Informative)
From TFA:
"Flash-based drives based on the new technology are expected on the market by August of this year."
A couple of months and they will be.
RSN (Score:3, Interesting)
>"Flash-based drives based on the new technology are expected on the market by August of this year."
Many, many things "are expected on the market by [insert future time here]. This is not the same as saying that these puppies will be on the shelf in Fry's on August 12, 2005 at a cost of one gonad three pence. Any number of "expected on the market" items have become cliches here on slashdot. All of which is to say that people should be given some leeway for skepticism before being flamed.
That sai
Re:Announces?! (Score:2)
Let's try again.
Wake up! [memtech.com]
Great news. (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd be quite interested in this for a desktop. Would pair nicely with a passively cooled system.
Re:Great news. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Great news. (Score:4, Interesting)
The registry is too important to a Windows OS. The OS is constantly writing to and reading from that damn thing.
I thought about the same thing too. A Linux OS might be more efficient though... You still have the problem of where to put the swap. On the drive with limited read/writes and isn't spinning, or on the one that's spinning and consuming power. Either way. I'd be concerned.
Thank goodness! (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Thank goodness! (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, but maintenance is a bitch. You have to keep fresh blood flowing through the thing all the time, or it just stops working. Honestly...they're even more touchy than AMD CPUs.
Also, if you don't defrag regularly, they go insane.
Re:Thank goodness! (Score:2)
Re:Thank goodness! (Score:2)
The drives should be fast, too (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The drives should be fast, too (Score:2, Funny)
It's good news but ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:It's good news but ... (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a great paper [bitmicro.com] about flash technology in HDD applications. The document is a bit lengthy, but the conclusion is that today's flash technology allows for enough erase/write cycles to make them more than viable for HDD use.
Re:It's good news but ... (Score:2)
Re:It's good news but ... (Score:2)
Perhaps because they're informative?
Re:It's good news but ... (Score:5, Informative)
First, the life of modern parts if much higher than you stated. I think it's in the hundreds of thousands if not millions of writes.
Second, they can apply the same techniques as spinning drives to remap bad blocks so that when a block stops working, it gets replaced by a spare one that was never seen by the user. A similar remapping can be done to swap heavily-used and lightly-used blocks to even out the wear and extend the life.
Re:It's good news but ... (Score:2)
/greger
Wear Leveling (Score:2)
Google on "flash wear leveling algorithm", and you are bound to turn up some info.
Swap? (Score:2)
What about swap? Seems that would still take it down relatively quickly.
Re:It's good news but ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Flash is specced for 100,000 erase cycles -- in a 'disk' application this probably equates to 100,000 writes. However, after about 10,000 erases, the write speed decreases significantly.
In my application, I remapped blocks of data on a cyclical basis, so that all the blocks would get used the same number of times.
At 100,000 cycles, if you erased and rewrote the entire disk every hour, it would last for 11 years. How many people are still using an 11 year old HDD? (That'd be, what, 1GB or so?)
The key question is how much this will cost. The fact that its aimed at laptops suggests that it will be significantly more expensive than a HDD.
Another question: how long do we keep calling Flash memory devices 'Flash drives'? Or will the name hang on, like 'dialling' telephone numbers?
16GB? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:16GB? (Score:3, Informative)
Regards,
Steve
Re:16GB? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:16GB? (Score:4, Funny)
Libraries of Congress? I measure my information the old fashioned way: print out all the 0s and 1s and see how many Volkswagen Beetles it takes to hold all the paper.
Cheers,
IT
Re:16GB? (Score:3, Funny)
Typical Slashdot Gripes for this Item (Score:4, Funny)
2) Not enough space to store my bittorrent downloads
3) Not enough space to store my iPod MP3 collection
4) Not enough space to store the web browser cache of various goatse.cx websites
5) Not enough space for my MythTV
6) Not enough space to store my archive of slashdot.org
Nothing to see. Move along.
Re:Typical Slashdot Gripes for this Item (Score:2)
I'm always looking for new ways to quiet my Myth box.
Re:Typical Slashdot Gripes for this Item (Score:2)
What would be the MTBF? (Score:3)
Re:What would be the MTBF? (Score:3, Informative)
Don't know about MTBF, but as they're not mechanical I'm sure they can live much longer than spinning disks (except for the write issue, but that can be buffered with more spares). As for defragging - don't think so, as defragging is only useful to reduce seek times while accessing the same file (the same file isn't physically scattered on disk). As there are no seek times here, why bother defragging.. file systems could b
Fragmentation (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What would be the MTBF? (Score:3, Interesting)
FAT stinks, but NTFS is okay when it comes to fragmentation. Ext2/3, Reiser, XFS, FFS, UFS, etc are all quite good at dealing with fragmentation. I don't know about HFS+, but I suspect it's simular to UFS, but with re
Re:What would be the MTBF? (Score:2)
Had I not RTFA... (Score:2)
Talk about subliminal marketing..."This is Bob. Bob is springing large and laughing easy"... I've gotto mute the TV during those back to back Enzyte commercials during Southpark.
mp3 players (Score:2, Interesting)
And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:5, Interesting)
The BIG use is for ruggidized laptops: You can, combined with a passively-cooled CPU, make a laptop with no moving parts and which could stand being dropped, kicked, and shaken to a great degree without damage.
Re:And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:2)
Re:And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:2)
oops did I say that out loud?
Re:And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:2)
I do that with my MythTV recordings when traveling, especially if flying.
Granted, 16GB may leave you tight on space if you don't recompress and you want more than one DVD. Still, you could do a copy and play off the flash, and then you only have to spin for long enough to copy the disc, which is probably 1/4 or 1/8th of the time.
Re:And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:2)
Re:And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:2)
Are you sure that it's 1/3 of the power budget? Western Digital's 2.5" drives only use 2.5 watts under read/write activity, and 2 watts idle - and they're nothing special.
So, for your claim to be true, then the CPU, northbridge, southbridge, memory, display, and everything else would have to consume no more than 4 watts...
steve
Re:And its no HUGE breakthrough on battery life. (Score:2)
Looks like... (Score:3, Interesting)
The proper way to announce this (Score:5, Funny)
That's where the bar has been raised, and I won't stand for sub standard hard drive technology announcements!
CompactFlash (Score:5, Interesting)
I ran WinXP off of this for a while. It was interesting to note the different behaviour in terms of performance; sustained transfers are considerably slower, seeks are considerably faster. Over all CF is slower than a 5400 RPM notebook drive, but the overal feel seems smoother somehow.
The unfortunate thing with CF is that they don't support UltraDMA modes, so you end up with more overhead on the CPU side, as well as a slower datapath.
Sometimes people bring up the limited write cycles of Flash. Well, yes, I did turn off the swap file. But most modern CompactFlash perform a sort of 'load balancing' of writes, which means that if you write to the same sector twice, the write may physically happen to two different sectors.
Re:CompactFlash (Score:4, Informative)
The CF+ and Compact Flash specification 3.0 includes UDMA 33 and UDMA 66 support. I've seen references to certain cards and CF->IDE adapters that support DMA, so that problem is partially solved, and will get better.
As for the problem of sustained speeds, there's always RAID 0...
steve
Re:CompactFlash (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/winhec/Pres05.mspx# t oc10 [microsoft.com]
"Hybrid Hard Drives with Non-Volatile Flash and Longhorn [WinHEC 2005; 207 KB]"
The presentation slants towards Longhorn but you can see
what's new here ? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:what's new here ? (Score:2, Funny)
Why limit these to laptops? (Score:3, Insightful)
I want a couple of handfuls of these to use in my home system. These aren't all that big so making a one or more RAIDsets would be nice, especially come backup time. Added plus: No spinning drives or the auxiliary fans to keep them cooled == nice quiet system.
Re:Why limit these to laptops? (Score:2)
Naming? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Naming? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Naming? (Score:2, Insightful)
Errr... (Score:2)
Because the chips are cut from a round flat disk of doped silicon, NowSitDownKidAndPleaseShutUp. Next question....
Simple.. (Score:2)
Re:Simple.. (Score:2)
12"? I remember 8" floppies quite well. They were, indeed, quite floppy. They were named as such to differentiate them from rigid discs, a term that is hardly ever used anymore, at least not in its original context.
As long as people don't use
What about servers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Flash sucks for this. (Score:3, Insightful)
Other than for laptop use, I'd rather have a DRAM-based drive that optionally gets backed-up/restored to conventional HD at power-off/on. It would give much better performance than flash, last much longer and probably cost much less per Gb.
If you just used it for
Unfortunately the only such drives I've found are ludicrously expensive.
Re:Flash sucks for this. (Score:2)
W
Cache + Virtual Memory = limited life (Score:2)
Cache and virtual memory will eat them up in no time.
Re:Memory (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Memory (Score:2)
Re:Memory (Score:2)
Because they serve COMPLETELY different purposes. Flash (non-voatile) memory's purpose is to basically work like a HDD. You store the data, unplug it, walk away and take the data with you. With a PCs "traditional" memory, there is NO need for this. That is what your HDD is for (long term storage). Your PCs memory is just needed to provide fast access to the data you are currently using. Once you turn the PC off, you aren't using it anymore and have no need for it there.
You
Re:Memory (Score:2)
Re:Memory (Score:2)
There were systems built back in the day with static RAM (rather than dynamic RAM) used exclusively. Although fast, they were pricey, and still required a current to the memory to keep it alive.
I've never heard of a system built with flash RAM as its only memory...I'm guessing the combination of price, reduced performance, and utter pointlessness soured people on the idea.
Re:Memory (Score:2)
Re:Memory (Score:3, Insightful)
IBM DeathsStar drives come to mind along with the Travelstar line..(We've replaced hundreds of those)
mosts of those were total failure with little to no warning.
More recently I had a 2 year old Maxtor puke on me..
Maybe it's me but todays drives just don't last like they used to.
If these new drives can run for 3-4 years before fraging themselves it'll be an improvement.
Re:This question is already in the original articl (Score:4, Informative)
What this means for you is that the manufacturers will get the cheap stuff. That means you'll get 100k writes if you're lucky, and most likely you'll get stuck with 10k.
Since that will probably take you past the 1 year warranty, the drive manufacturers will say, "Ha, ha. Thank you for your money. Please buy another drive."
Re:This question is already in the original articl (Score:5, Insightful)
There is also the matter of medium damage and data recovery. HDDs may not be as mechanically reliable but if there's something on stored on an HDD that you really need then it can be recovered by a recovery service. What happens to your data if your rig gets zapped in some kind of freak accident and the flash memory is affected? It is, after all, an EEPROM. Everything on it would be erased. Great for spies, but not so great for everyone else!
Re:Flash makes a horible computer drive (Score:2)
Re:Flash makes a horible computer drive (Score:5, Informative)
Again, please refer to this paper [bitmicro.com] about flash technology in HDD applications. The document is a bit lengthy, but the conclusion is that today's flash technology allows for enough erase/write cycles to make them more than viable for HDD use.
Re:Flash makes a horible computer drive (Score:2)
Re:How many write cycles? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes. Flash memory can only be written to a finite number of times, and your flash disk-drive will stop working at some point.
Exactly like platter-based disk drives.
Re:How many write cycles? (Score:2)
Re:How many write cycles? (Score:2, Informative)
As someone else mentioned, all hard drives eventually fail. Even SCSI drives. It's a mechanical device and all mechanical devices eventually fail. You realize that the slowest device in your system is the hard drive, right? You realize that your hard drive and your optical drive are the only moving parts in your computer and thus, are more prone to failure? If you want to keep usin
Re:How many write cycles? (Score:2)
My computers have fans...they move rather vigorously.
Re:Numbers suck.... (Score:2, Informative)