Why Not Solid State Hard Drives?
waterlogged asks: "I was just wondering if anybody has heard of a cheap ram based network drive? Seems to me with the ram prices being at about US. $12.00 for 128 megs that someone hasn't developed a battery backup version of this to plug into a network or even a bus. A gig worth of 8ns seek time storage for $120 anyone? That would just about eliminate any wait in loading programs."
BigSlowTarget asks: "There are some previous articles on Slashdot about vendors selling solid state drives, but they all seem to be quite expensive - particularly given the slide in the cost of memory. Has anyone hacked together a solid state drive to take advantage of $60/GB memory prices? I'd really like to be able to boot and run at solid state speed without spending thousands."
Jah-Wren Ryel asks: "In case you haven't noticed, RAM is incredibly cheap, you can put a gigabyte of PC133 RAM into your machine for less than $60. A year ago, that would have cost more like $600. So now it is feasible for one to have a 10-15GB RAM disk, except for one thing - most motherboards won't support more than 2GB total (4 dimm slots x 512MB per dimm). It seems like it wouldn't be too hard to design a PCI card to hold 20-30 dimms and make that available through a hardware windowing scheme (like EMS/EMM back in the old 16-bit days). With the right drivers it could be used as a big RAM disk or for buffercache. Is there such a product out there? The closest I have seen are solid-state disks that sit on the other end of a scsi bus, are too expensive, and aren't anywhere near as fast as a PCI implementation could be."
So what technical details (and the issues of volatile data and price) may be preventing the construction of RAM based drives, and is there anything else that may be preventing some entrepreneurial soul from bringing such a thing to market?
You got that right! Eggplants!
Just check this out for example....
Ace905
Ace
From western-digital.com I can get a 40GB 7200RPM UATA/100 caviar harddrive for $117.00. That's 341.88MB per dollar.
Funny, from western-digital.com all I can get is "agency natasha digital cyber friends online catalog of russian women. dating.servicelivenow- online personals and profiles. arabic dating digital cyber friends for mostly middle eastern men and women to place ads. romantics network digital cyber friends features a directory of matchmaking sites, free chat, postcards, advice, backgroundsets, ideas, and more."
From western-digital.com I can get a 40GB 7200RPM UATA/100 caviar harddrive for $117.00. That's 341.88MB per dollar.
Yes, but those are dog MB.