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Solid State Drives Will Find A Home: IDC Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Monday, 13 August 2007
Solid state drives (SSDs) are poised to go mainstream as advances in solid state memory technology and dipping price points drive adoption says a new report from IDC.

The research argues that performance and mobility-related requirements will propel the technology to US$5.4 billion in revenues by the year 2011. That's a healthy 71% compound annual growth rate (CAGR)over theUS$373 million sold last year.

It sees the solid state disks as complementary to traditional hard drives, particularly in areas not well served by hard disk drives (HDDs). This it sees as the PC market in contrast to the server market or other mobile devices.

IDC says that Enterprise solutions focused on high I/O performance, as well as extremely hostile work environments, will continue to be ripe opportunities for SSD adoption.

"For many years SSDs have sat on the fringe of the digital universe, but a tremendous opportunity is ahead for SSD storage," said Jeff Janukowicz, research manager, Solid State Drives. "Today, SSDs are about delivering a premium solution. In the future, SSDs will be about delivering the right solution to the right market as technology advances and requirements converge."

The PC market is transitioning to notebook PCs with an emphasis on mobility and durability - requirements that align very well with memory drives which have higher performance, lower power requirements and are potentially more robust that than spinning disk drives. The rapid decline in the cost of NAND flash memory will translate into lower price points and coupled with increased capacities, will make them competitive with HDDs in certain market segments, especially where capacity requirements are minimal.

SSD OEMs will need to address concerns regarding read/write limitations and any associated reliability issues, especially for enterprise customers.

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