Disk Drives Face Challenge From Chips
Found on Slashdot on Sunday, 10 December 2006
Researchers are reporting significant progress in perfecting a different way to store data in semiconductors, which could replace one widely used type of memory chip and possibly become a credible competitor to disk drives. The researchers, in a paper being delivered at a technical conference in San Francisco, say they used a novel combination of materials to create prototype phase-change components that are more than 500 times as fast as flash chips, while requiring less than half of the electrical power to record data.
I wonder when harddrive replacements will finally hot the market with a competitive price.