Advertisement
Promo
Make The Case - Mobility

32GB solid state disk comes to UK notebooks

Matt Loney ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 22 May 2007 18:18 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment
32GB solid state disk comes to UK notebooks

Samsung's 32GB solid state notebook drive is now available in the UK through distributor Just Rams, the company said on Tuesday.

Unlike regular hard drives, solid state drives (SSDs) contain no moving parts. Hence they are faster, more reliable and consume less power, which means they run cooler and help boost battery life. They also cost over five times more, with the 32GB Samsung unit priced at £350 plus VAT, compared with £65 for a regular 100GB hard disk.

The device is based on 4Gb flash memory chips, and Samsung's manager for flash marketing, Ralf Ebert, said 8Gb chips are now available and should appear in a 64GB SSD in June or July. This will cost roughly twice as much as the 32GB model and, while it is technically possible to double up the memory chips in the device to achieve a 128GB drive, the cost, at roughly £1,400, would be too high for most customers.

"This year is about 32GB," said Ebert, who expects to ship roughly 70,000 this year. "We double the density [of memory chips] year-on-year," he added, and Samsung plans to increase capacities as the market grows, trying to keep the price point roughly steady.

Given that prices of flash memory and hard disk drives experience a similar downward trend, the price differential is likely to remain, conceded Sanjiv Kotecha of Just Rams. The drive is likely to attract very tech-savvy buyers who want faster boot times, more reliable laptops or better battery life. "It's not about bigger capacities," he added. "We also anticipate demand from IT departments who spend time rebuilding notebooks after crashes. It is still early days, but we expect demand to grow rapidly."

The Samsung drive weights 51g — roughly half the weight of a mechanical 2.5-inch hard disk, and consumes 0.5 watts, compared with 2.4 watts. Ebert said this can translate to up to 15 percent longer battery life in a notebook PC. The mean time before failure is guaranteed at one million hours, although the nature of SSDs makes it difficult to compare this directly with mechanical hard disks. In mechanical hard disks it is usually the read/write heads that fail. In an SSD it is individual memory cells in the grid that makes up the chip.

The Samsung SSD uses a technique called wear levelling to spread the load of erase/write cycles over all cells on the chip, rather than starting at the same point each time. As cells fail, the controller ignores them. "Over the lifetime of the disk you could in theory see the capacity shrink," said Ebert, "though this would only be a miniscule amount".

SSDs are also likely to find applications in servers, where heat dissipation is a perennial problem.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
29 out of 30 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

More in this Special Report

  • Inside Intel's Santa Rosa platform

    Tech Guide Improvements to the processor, chipset and wireless components of Intel's latest mobile platform should result in a new generation of faster notebooks with longer battery life. Business systems will also get Intel's Active Management Technology (AMT) for the first time, while Turbo Memory should reduce the frequency of hard disk accesses, saving power and boosting performance.

  • Intel's generation gap irks Europe

    Leader Intel says the future is mobile, wireless and networked. We agree — so why is the company ignoring 3G?

  • Intel's Centrino launch brings mixed reactions

    News The launch of Centrino Pro on Wednesday drew a crowd of notebook vendors and IT managers, but not all were convinced by Intel's mobility upgrade.

  • Acer's Santa Rosa TravelMate notebooks

    Preview Acer has refreshed its professional range of TravelMate notebooks with a new design and Intel's latest Santa Rosa technology platform.

  • Dell enters tablet market

    News Dell is working on its first design for a tablet PC, which will be called the Latitude XT.

  • AMD debuts Griffin mobile processor

    News AMD has revealed its new mobile microprocessor and platform, which will be incorporated into new products from the middle of 2008.

  • 32GB solid state disk comes to UK notebooks

    News It might be five times more expensive, but Samsung claims its flash disk is faster, cooler and more reliable than traditional hard drives.

  • Photos: Palm Foleo

    Photos Palm cofounder Jeff Hawkins has unveiled the company's latest project: the Palm Foleo. A companion product for smartphones, the Linux-based Foleo looks like an ultraportable notebook and is designed to let you more easily view and edit email and office documents, among other things.

  • Buyer's Guide: Santa Rosa notebooks

    Buyer's Guide Which is our current favourite Intel Santa Rosa notebook? Check our Buyer's Guide to find out — and keep checking back to see if it changes.

  • Intel's turbo memory needs a boost

    Leader Despite impeccable engineering and massive marketing, part of Intel's mobile plan seems to have stalled...

  • Mobility: Make The Case (PDF)

    Download the PDF version of this special report.

Featured White Papers

See All White Papers


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters