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Flash cache to earn big bucks

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 11 September 2006 - 13:22 · 14 comments & 5935 views

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New PCs that start up almost instantly could take 40 per cent of the market by 2008, boosting sales of the Flash memory chips that drive them. The fast-booting PCs could account for as much as seven per cent of global demand for Nand Flash chips within two years, and earn an extra $1bn for manufacturers, according to researchers at South Korea's Hyundai Securities.

Microsoft and Intel have unveiled plans to use Flash memory to improve disk access speed and reduce boot-up time. The Flash memory holds some commonly-used parts of the operating system which are normally accessed from the hard drive when the PC starts. Microsoft's Flash-assisted start-up technology is called Windows ReadyBoost, and Intel's is currently codenamed Robson.

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News source: vnunet

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#1 vetcashman on 11 Sep 2006 - 18:44
Yeah, this is something that has been needed for a while now, no one wants to wait a minute for a PC to boot up when it could be all loaded in just a few seconds. I look forward to the future

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