The widespread use of Flash-based solid-state drives (SSDs) could be as far
off as five years, according to one analyst.
Jim Handy, of
Objective
Analysis, believes that the chip-based drives may not see significant use in
notebook computers for three to five years.
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"We remain sceptical in our outlook for rapid adoption of Flash-based SSDs,"
he said.
"Flash has found success in replacing hard disk drives [HDDs] where a fixed
capacity is needed, but notebook and PC users will continue to demand
increasingly larger HDDs for quite a while yet."
The first Flash-based drives began to emerge as options for notebooks in
2007. Vendors such as
Apple and
Dell offer SSDs
on selected notebooks at anywhere from $900 to $1,300.
"SSDs are about 20 times more costly than an HDD of the same capacity, a
ratio that is likely to remain constant for the next several years," said Handy.
It pays to shop around when considering the relative merits and claims about SSD performance
Jim Handy Analyst, Objective Analysis
The extra cost is not without its rewards, however. In addition to a longer
lifespan and no moving parts to damage, SSDs require less power and are much
faster than HDDs.
This can dramatically cut start-up and loading times, and can improve battery
life, but the performance boost is not yet worth the smaller capacity and
premium price, according to Handy.
"For our money, and yours, it pays to shop around when considering the
relative merits and claims about SSD performance," said the analyst.
Handy is not alone in his assessment.
HP executives said
last month that the company does not expect SSDs to become large enough and
cheap enough to appeal to most users
until at
least 2010.
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