Alex Tatham
Alex Tatham is managing director of Simms

Get ready to cash in on solid state gold

The increase in Flash memory production is sending a clear message about the future of
SSD, says Alex Tatham

Written by Alex Tatham

Why is it that the Flash memory manufacturers bemoan the state of the Flash memory market and still increase production in their Far East factories? Surely they must be predicting an increase in Nand Flash use that will require such mega-production?

Well, there is little doubt that Flash memory is already the removable storage medium of choice for consumers and businesses. With 64GB already available on a memory stick, there is little need for greater capacities for most data transfers.

So while the market availability of smaller capacities increases and corresponding prices decrease in accordance with Moore’s Law (Kingston has recently stopped offering 1GB SD cards for instance) ­ this is still not using the increased production capacities of vendors.

Inevitably, Nand Flash is being used beyond removable storage and is now being adopted increasingly as operating storage and back-up in the form of solid-state disk (SSD) drives. These devices are being designed with the same form factors and interfaces as more traditional hard disks (HDD) and are already used extensively in industrial applications.

Industrial computers require fast, rugged and cool-running storage, and SSD provides this perfectly. With no moving parts such drives give off 85 per cent less heat than HDD and can operate in more extreme temperatures.

Their versatility will eventually lead to them replacing HDD as the price per megabyte falls ­ and it is falling as fast as the UK government’s popularity ratings.

Imagine the heat saved in a City of London server room, already struggling to cope with the enormous power required to cool their over-worked disks, or the efficiencies gained by a
boot-up over 10 times faster than existing disks.

We are on top of the hype curve at present, but production planners ­ like book-makers
­ are rarely wrong and they are signalling their intentions to the world.

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Share
  • Print

reader comments

related articles

Kingston targets SMEs with easy SSD upgrades

Kit includes cloning software to speed up transfer from old hard drives 03 Jun 2009

Intel Flash drives to mark SSD push

Developer conference provides a platform for Intel to introduce Flash drive range 29 Aug 2008

Toshiba unveils 512GB solid state drive

New range of drives coming in 2009 18 Dec 2008

latest news

Lenovo targets HP partner base

Vendor looks to expand reach and looks to rivals' channels to achieve its aims 03 Jul 2009

VMware rakes in 700 service provider partners

Virtualisation giant claims VSPP programme has gained significant traction in short space of time 03 Jul 2009

Compellent hits out at debate snub

Storage vendor writes open letter to prime minister in protest at being left out of £1bn stimulus debate 03 Jul 2009

poll

Feeling secure?

Feeling secure?

Is offering standalone security still a viable business model?

View poll results

boxing ring

CRN Fight Night 2009 bouts now LIVE!

It is time to relive the craziness that was CRN Fight Night 2009

Eddie Pacey and Nitin Joshi

In The Studio with CRN: Credit in the Channel

CRN Editor Sara Yirrell chats to two of the industry's credit stalwarts - Nitin Joshi and Eddie Pacey

events

East Sussex golf resort and spa

CRN Golf Challenge 2009

Join us for the premier golf event in the channel calendar

CRN Channel Conference 2009 logo

CRN Channel Conference 2009

A one-day conference dedicated to the needs of businesses in the UK technology channel

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation