From my home city:
Price drops ahead for solid-state drives
Posted by Michael Kanellos
Solid-state drives are still going to be somewhat hard to find in 2008, but the industry might get close to the magic price point in 2009 or 2010.
Micron Technology, the Boise, Idaho-based maker of DRAM and flash memory, on Wednesday unveiled its plans to come out with solid-state drives. The drives function like regular hard drives, but instead of storing data on spinning disks, the data gets stored on NAND memory chips--the kind found in cameras and MP3 players.
Micron will start mass-producing solid-state drives in the first quarter of 2008. The first drives will hold either 32GB or 64GB of memory. While that's less than half the capacity of the average notebook drive today, it's actually more storage than most business users need, said Dean Klein, vice president of memory system development at Micron. Plus, solid-state notebooks can come out of a deep sleep or launch applications far more rapidly.
Posted by Michael Kanellos
Solid-state drives are still going to be somewhat hard to find in 2008, but the industry might get close to the magic price point in 2009 or 2010.
Micron Technology, the Boise, Idaho-based maker of DRAM and flash memory, on Wednesday unveiled its plans to come out with solid-state drives. The drives function like regular hard drives, but instead of storing data on spinning disks, the data gets stored on NAND memory chips--the kind found in cameras and MP3 players.
Micron will start mass-producing solid-state drives in the first quarter of 2008. The first drives will hold either 32GB or 64GB of memory. While that's less than half the capacity of the average notebook drive today, it's actually more storage than most business users need, said Dean Klein, vice president of memory system development at Micron. Plus, solid-state notebooks can come out of a deep sleep or launch applications far more rapidly.
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