SourceSlashdot wrote:"Flash drive capacities have been expanding dramatically in recent years, but this article says that's about to change, in part because of the limits of current lithography technology. Meanwhile, disk drive densities will continue to grow, which the author says will mean many years before solid state drives replace hard drives — if they ever do. From the article: 'The bottom line is that there are limits to how small things can get with current technology. Flash densities are going to have data density growth problems, just as other storage technologies have had over the last 30 years. This should surprise no one. And the lithography problem for flash doesn't end there. Jeff Layton, Enterprise Technologist for HPC at Dell, notes that as lithography gets smaller, NAND has more and more troubles — the voltages don't decrease, so the probability of causing an accidental data corruption of a neighboring NAND goes up. "So at some point, you just can't reduce the size and hope to not have data corruption," notes Layton.'"
Why SSDs may not replace HDDs
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Why SSDs may not replace HDDs
Interesting article that I just read on Slashdot:
Kia kaha, Kia māia, Kia manawanui.
Re: Why SSDs may not replace HDDs
I think we will just start seeing better 'hybrid' technology be created for desktop users. Having the SSD infront of the HDD acting as a cache of sorts.