New hybrid drives promise faster Vista laptops, PCs

29.07.2006

Chris Bennett, vice president of core systems at NetApp, said the technology might find a niche in very small network-attached storage systems, but sees "no apparent benefit" for enterprise class systems, noting that NetApp disk arrays already use faster DRAM caches and those systems typically are not powered down.

However, allowing drives to spin down during periods of inactivity could be important as data centers face heat and power issues. "In a server environment, power consumption is a big factor. If you can keep disk drives spun down that saves power," Rao said.

Falling prices for flash could make it more attractive for network storage, Panabaker said. "[Flash] is now cheaper than DRAM so we see an interesting trend where it may be cheaper in really specialized products, such as some high-end SCSI arrays, to use flash," he said.

As performance continues to climb and cost drops, flash is likely to become attractive for more and more applications. "Any place there is a gap between processor performance and disk I/O, flash will apply," Rao said.