The only prices I found about this kind of product is at: http://www.psism.com/flashdrive.htm
It is still expensive, but when I see the price of last year's usb flash disks compared to todays, the ratio is 1/2. I bet this will follow usb drives prices. I'm happy to see that some people are interrested by this topic. cheers > -----Message d'origine----- > De : [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] la part de Ragnar Lonn > Envoyé : jeudi 15 décembre 2005 10:58 > À : Bob Willcox > Cc : Alexandre DELAY; [email protected] > Objet : Re: HDD > > > Bob Willcox wrote: > > >On Wed, Dec 14, 2005 at 05:45:53PM +0100, Alexandre DELAY wrote: > > > > > >>Don't you think that flash drives are also a good solution? > >> > >>I am sure that it will be the future replacement for hard drive disks. > >>see http://www.memtech.com/ for example > >> > >>With no buffer and 1ms access delay you minimise write > failures. It is an > >>interresting solution. > >> > >> > > > >Hmm, I see no prices listed on the Memtech web site (did I simply > >miss them?). So, what does a 96GB flash drive cost in comparison to a > >magnetic disk hard drive of similar capacity? > > > >Stories of the impending demise of magnetic disk drives have been > >circulating since at least the late '70s (back then I seem to remember > >that bubble and/or CCD memory was to spell their doom). So far, it > >appears that nothing has come along that has been able to compete on a > >cost per byte basis. Flash memory might be the technology to do it, but > >somehow I doubt it. > > > > > > I like to build silent PCs on my spare time and avoiding any moving > parts is of course > a good way to achieve this goal. This makes me very interested in any > memory-based > hard disk replacements but so far, they seem to be hideously expensive. > You have to > pay over $1000 for 8 GB of storage. Multiply that with 10 or so and > you're likely > to have the cost of that 96GB flash drive. > > I too thought that memory disks would take over some five years ago or > so, but > conventional hard disk technology has managed to stay ahead all the > time, providing > lots more storage per dollar and often also throughput rates almost > matching that > of the solid state memories. I think we will see a shift sometime, but > I've stopped > trying to predict it. Hard disk technology has such a big lead that it > may take a > while yet, I think. > > /Ragnar > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware > To unsubscribe, send any mail to > "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" > _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hardware To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
