[QUOTE="householdman"][QUOTE="xscrapzx"][QUOTE="householdman"][QUOTE="HuusAsking"][QUOTE="householdman"] I will condeed the price as a problem for solid state drives, however, HDD's have the highest failure rate of any internal componant of a PC, save optical drives/disk drives. Flash drives are pretty much just more advanced variations of the rom chips on your mobo.
I mean. HDDs rely on a delicate unison of heads and magnetic plates that act in much the same manner as a rewritable cd. It has native issues. It's like comparing a portable cd player with an ipod.....Flash drives are essentially a single electrical component, all the otherstuff that's on the pcb is to facilitate data transfer and power managment.
xscrapzx
But flash drives are electrically-sensitive. That's why they have limited write cycles--it takes a good jolt to write, and these wear and tear the cells.Yea, but were talking about hundreds of thousands of write cycles, and that's for those cheap POS you buy from electronic stores. As I said, price is an issue, but it is more than possible to create a drive that will withstand more write cycles than you could possibly do in the space of a normal HDDs life cycle. There is also optimization techniques that would be implemented, such as putting more emphasis in running core software directly from RAM banks, as opposed from the main storage facility of the computer.
Electrical interference, psychical knocks, power failures, over use, intense heat...all these things can cause head crashes or worse in an HDD, a lot of the time rendering the device useless and the data unsalvagable.
Im sorry your write and we are all wrong, and basically what you are saying in order to make those awesome solid state drives last long is by implementing something that doesn't even exsist right now! So you are agreeing with the rest of us, whats your point?
Of course it exists, as I pointed out, it's just too pricey to use at the scale needed, at this point in time. I'm just saying the technology is sound, more so than that of a mechanical drive. Don't blame me for the lackluster implementation.
I'm not trying to claim that HDDs are less reliable than the flash drives you will buy from Radio shack or whatever, simply that given the reasources, flash drives could be manufactored that would far outlast a traditional HDD.
I understand where you are coming from, but if its not being implemented, (which you could say about a lot of technology) it doesn't exsist at this time. So there for you have a reliability issue with solid state drives.
Yea, but we are discussing this in a topic that specificlly deals with the future and possible media changes. I'd say that the things I have stated here a more than relevant. I don't expect PCs with solid state storage facilities to be realesed in the next few years any more than I expect support for optical drives to suddenly drop and be replaced with the cart revolution :P
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