Archive for the 'Industry News' Category

Sandisk on Track to Release 500gb+ SSD

Date Thursday, February 12th, 2009 Posts Posted by Korey

Yesterday Sandisk announced the release of their 32nm chips which provideds the foundation for increased storage space and reduced costs. Great to see R&D in a down market!


Kingston Partners With Intel to Release Their First SSD

Date Monday, October 13th, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

Drives provided by Intel, Kingston will provide the marketing, sales channels and technical support. Article here.


Photographer Hobbyists Turn Passion in to Profit

Date Thursday, September 4th, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

The digital camera revolution has changed the stock photography business giving opportunity to hobbyists and low-cost but great looking stock photos to small businesses. Sites like iStockPhoto.com and Shutterstock.com are the leaders in this category. iStockPhoto.com has over 3,500,000 photos available for purchase. According to this article in Forbes, some hobbyists are making up to $10k per month! It is an amazing business for all involved!iStockPhoto logoShutterstock logo


Shakeout in the SSD Market Near

Date Wednesday, August 27th, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

There are currently 50 companies that offer SSD drives. The major players are Intel, Micro, Sandisk, Toshiba and Samsung. According to an EETime article, although currently high priced, the sweet spot would be 256gb drives for laptops in the $800-$1000 range. The pressure is on to lower prices and the competition will be fierce! Expect some great deals within a year!


SSD Weak Performance Blamed on Vista

Date Thursday, July 24th, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

SSD “performance in the Vista environment falls short of what the
market really needs
“, admitted Harari at the company’s earnings
conference this week.

Why not? According to Harari, it’s because “Vista is not optimised for Flash memory solid-state disks”.

 


SSD Hard Drives Reduce Battery Runtime

Date Monday, July 7th, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

Drama – read Tom’s Hardware Review.

“The results of our testing are a shock for anyone who cares about battery runtime, as our results prove unmistakably that battery runtimes do not increase when using flash based SSDs. As a matter of fact, most flash SSD products actually contribute to emptying your battery even faster! Mainstream flash SSDs if they can even be called mainstream at prices of $500 and up do not even provide convincing performance while they help to suck your battery empty quicker than before.”


No More Computer Removal at Airport

Date Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

New laptop bags, with a fold-down section or a stand-alone protective sleeve to give the X-ray machines a clear shot, have just been cleared by the T.S.A. for faster travel through airport security. Pathfinder Luggage and Targus will be the first manufacturers to offer these bags in early fall.


IDC Predicts 70% Annual Growth for SSD

Date Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

In 2007 the SSD market generated $400 million in revenue. Shipment growth is expected to go through the roof at over 76% per year! The traditional government, military and industrial markets will give way to growth through the business and consumer sectors.


So Cool! Make Your Own SATA SSD

Date Thursday, April 24th, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

Great article at MobileMag on making your own SATA SSD with the Century DIY SSD Kit and 2 32gb CompactFlash!

DIY Sata SSD


SSD Laptops By Dell Seeing Higher Return Rates

Date Wednesday, March 19th, 2008 Posts Posted by Korey

An article on News.com states that a large manufacturer (read: Dell) is getting a return rate “an order of magnitude higher” on flash based notebooks versus standard HDD notebooks. The return rates are between 10-20% compared to 1-2% for traditional hard drives. It seems that a Samsung SSD drive is to blame for lackluster performance.

The price to add on a SSD drive – $900!

As this nascent industry grows up these problems will dissipate. More demand will create better products at lower cost.

The best fact of this article: current flash sells for around $3/GB…a 50% decline from last quarter of last year.