SSD is going to make a big impact this year and many memory manufacturers, including Team Group, are jumping on board.
It seems like solid-state storage is really trying to make a serious move into the market this year, with
Sandisk already showing us its 32GB SATA drive.
We popped along to see Taiwanese memory manufacturer, Team Group Inc. – a brand that’s popular among enthusiast circles – to find that the company was displaying its latest solid-state drive.
Like the Sandisk, Team Group’s SSD uses a SATA interface and is the same size as a standard 2.5” notebook hard drive. However, this one boasts four times the capacity of Sandisk’s drive and also comes with an IDE interface too.
The drives on Team Group’s stand were not functional though, and the company didn’t commit to a timeframe on when we can expect these capacities to appear in the solid-state market.
Finally, Team’s solid-state drives don’t perform as well as Sandisk’s on paper, with only 25MB/sec read and 18MB/sec write speeds. However, company reps were quick to say that the drives would be twice as fast by the time they make it to the market. That date hasn’t been confirmed yet though, and neither has the expected retail price.
Discuss in the forums.
L J
Bet it's gonna cost an arm and a leg, though, if the Sandisk 32GB drive is £200...
...£1000 for a 128GB HDD...?
Even if it comes out at twice the price of the Sandisk unit it'll be a bit too pricey for most people. Besides - for a laptop #i'd say 32Gb is usually enough - you can always use a big USB drive to dump your data onto when you get home / back to the office.
what he says.
most flash can be directly connected to IDE wheras stata needs conversion chips. (hence the cheapo CF-IDE adaptors but expensive and rarer Cf-Sata adaptors).
cool drives :D (the 128gb one is bigger than my os drive.. where almost there :D )
or is the read/write cycles getting comparable to the life expectancy of a platter based HDD?