SSD drives for Windows 8?

I just found this really cool article from Gizmodo about SSD’s (Solid State Drives).

The cool part is, they are talking about “Windows 8 will be even better for solid-state storage”.

What are Solid State Drives? They contrast them with regular hard drives:

On a basic level, a hard disk drive works thusly: Inside is a magnetised recording surface called a platter that spins around really fast, with a head that zooms across disk to read and write data – think kinda like a record player, except the head never touches the surface, ’cause that would be very, very bad. So, you can see the problem with hard drives: They’re fragile (don’t drop your computer) and they’re slow to access stuff because the head has to physically move to where the data is.

Solid State Drives:

With an SSD, on the other hand, we’re talking straight silicon. What’s inside is a bunch of flash memory chips and a controller running the show. There are no moving parts, so an SSD doesn’t need to start spinning, doesn’t need to physically hunt data scattered across the drive and doesn’t make a whirrrrr.

The result is that it’s crazy faster than a regular hard drive in nearly every way, so you have insanely quick boot times (an old video, but it stands), application launches, random writes and almost every other measure of drive performance (writing large files excepted). For a frame of reference, General Manager of SanDisk’s SSD group, Doron Myersdorf, says an equivalent hard drive would have to spin at almost 40,000rpm to match an SSD.

It’s a really great article.

You can check it out here

Filed Under: ArchitectureDevelopmentRumorsStorage

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About the Author

I have more than a decade of information security, project management and management consulting experience. I have specialized in the management and deployment of large scale ERP client/server systems. My responsibilities have ranged from consultant to senior project manager to Principal/Director. My Prior work history includes VERITAS Software, Deloitte & Touche (now Deloitte Consulting), EDS Enterprise Solutions, IBM, Kaiser Permanente and Warner Bros. In 2002, I began to make the switch from Information Technology to Online Marketing and in 2008 I started my own business. I run a new media online marketing company headquartered in Pasadena, California. (http://www.nnigma.com).

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