HardwareHeaven.com

HardwareHeaven.com

Looking for the skin chooser?
 
 
  • Home

  • Hardware reviews

  • Articles

  • News

  • Tools

  • Gaming at HardwareHeaven

  • Forums

 

Go Back   HardwareHeaven.com > Forums > News > Other Tech News


Other Tech News The latest community based technology news from across the globe. (If you aren't a community newsposter then use the "Submit News" section.)

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old May 6, 2004, 05:07 PM   #1
Dom
DriverHeaven Extreme Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Posts: 12,940
Rep Power: 0
Dom is on a distinguished road

Microsoft Proposes Combining Flash, Hard Drives

SEATTLE--Microsoft hopes to combine two popular storage media – flash memory and hard drives – in a bid to cut power in future laptops.
In a presentation at the WinHEC show here Wednesday, Microsoft officials said they had begun talks with hard-disk makers to redefine how hard drives access data. The upgrades would require flash memory to be built in or alongside hard drives, to minimize the time the PC would access the drive.

While desktop customers value speed, laptop users are more likely to try and postpone connecting to a power cord. Although notebook PC OEMs often look to the CPU and display as the chief power draws, spinning up a rotating hard drive can also drain batteries quickly. Using Microsoft Word, for example, consumes more power than running the MobileMark laptop benchmark, Microsoft's tests found.

Microsoft is proposing embedding a NAND flash chip in or near the hard drive to serve as a write buffer, in conjunction with "Longhorn", Microsoft's next-generation operating system. Executives called the initiative a "project", but tried to make a case for redesigning next-generation 1.8-inch and 2.5-inch mobile hard drives with the new technology. However, Microsoft has just begun to contact drive vendors, so any drives would likely be years away.

According to Jim Allchin, Microsoft's group vice president of platforms, Longhorn contains a technology called "SuperFetch," essentially a technology for "reading ahead" or predicting what data the operating system will work on next – a technique already employed to some extent by microprocessors. Longhorn will store this read-ahead data in a small software cache within the PC's system memory. Reading the data out of RAM instead of off the disk not only means the data can be accessed faster, but the disk does not have to be accessed frequently.

Read More...

________________________
Source: ExtremeTech
Dom is offline   Reply With Quote


Reply

Thread Tools