Hybrid hard drives

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Guest

Has anyone seen the new hard drives from Seagate and Samsung? They have made
a hard drive with a jump drive on it. A hard drive with 256MB of cache.
 
Aren't HDs with large caches, in some instances -- like random requests -- actually slower, since,
if the requested data is not in the cache, then the cache has to be cleared, and re-written?

| Has anyone seen the new hard drives from Seagate and Samsung? They have made
| a hard drive with a jump drive on it. A hard drive with 256MB of cache.
 
The technology that uses these new hybrid hard drives is called Windows
ReadyDrive.
You will generally have a faster system using this technology or at least a
better performing system, with longer battery life for laptops.
 
Gary Mount said:
The technology that uses these new hybrid hard drives is called Windows
ReadyDrive.
You will generally have a faster system using this technology or at least
a better performing system, with longer battery life for laptops.

It will be interesting to see how well these work from a reliability
standpoint. Flash RAM typically has a limited number of write cycles
allowed (perhaps 100K-1M). I have heard of windows based controller systems
with flash memory instead of hard drives having problems after a few months
unless VM is disabled, the flash cards die in this time.

Regards,
Bob Headrick
 

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