
Metal nanocrystals can more than double memory capacity.
Flash memory storage, traditionally used in cell phones, digital cameras, and MP3 players, is finding its way onto the laptop. Last October, Intel unveiled a hybrid technology in which flash is used with a conventional magnetic hard drive to increase battery life. Then, last month at the CeBIT, a technology show in Hannover, Germany, Samsung Semiconductor displayed a laptop in which 32 gigabytes of flash completely replaces the hard drive.
Now, as storage densities rise and prices fall for flash technology, many industry experts expect that it's only a matter of time before it becomes common in laptops.
There are numerous advantages to putting flash memory into laptops. The technology is based on transistors and has a design similar to microprocessors , making flash memory chips more compact and lighter than magnetic hard disks -- which could lead to featherweight laptops.
Additionally, flash has no moving parts, unlike a hard disk, where data is read from a spinning disk. This difference has two benefits: flash memory consumes less power, and it's more rugged and less prone to failure, because there are no moving parts. "Anyone who's had a hard drive wipe out knows you've got to be real careful with magnetic media," says Ed Doller, CTO of the Flash Memory Group at Intel.
Yet flash memory still has one major drawback: cost. Many believe that this will keep flash from replacing laptop hard disks in the near future. Currently, flash storage costs about $25 per gigabyte -- roughly 100 times more than magnetic storage. By 2009, though, 20 gigabytes of flash could cost less than $150, or about $7.50 per gigabyte, according to SanDisk, a data storage company. But this is still three times more than hard-disk prices today, says Tom Coughlin of Coughlin Associates, a data-storage consulting company.
Despite the relatively high cost of flash right now, companies such as Intel are already taking advantage of the benefits that even a small amount of flash memory affords. The company's hybrid drive systems, available in early 2007, will use flash as a hard-drive cache. Some data will be accessed without requiring the hard drive to spin, saving energy. "It gives the ability to lower the power consumption and when you launch an application, it opens two times faster," according to Intel's Doller.
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