Is Vistas Hybrid Hype Running into a Hard(ware) Reality?
Opinion: Mass quantities of flash-cached hybrid hard drives were expected to make their way into Vista notebooks this spring. But some storage industry pros recognize that "greater customer education" will be needed for this new technol
Last summer, industry and customer conferences were abuzz with presentations about new flash memory caching technologies that would improve the user experience of Windows Vista, especially for mobile desktops. And storage vendors climbed on board with preannouncements of "hybrid" flash-enabled drives to support the plan. However, with Vista now in general release, the timing for hybrid hard drives may not meet the early rosy predictions. It appears that many system vendors are still looking for someone else to be the early adopter of this technology. As a result, Microsoft in late 2006 quietly revised its standard definition for a "Premium" Vista notebook, pushing back by at least a year its requirements for a hybrid drive.There are two flash cache architectures associated with Vista, and both take advantage of Microsofts SuperFetch intelligent memory management technology. The first is ReadyBoost, which uses a cache connected to the Vista notebook or desktop, such as an ordinary USB thumb drive, to speed up overall system and application performance.
Click here to read more about SuperFetch and the Vista flash caching schemes.
The other is called ReadyDrive, which uses a flash cache located on the systems hard drive to improve boot times and power usage. ReadyDrives expanded flash caching is dubbed "hybrid" HDD (hard disk drive) by the industry.
On the ReadyBoost front, many owners of thumb drives are finding that only a portion of their collection can match the performance and capacity requirements of ReadyBoost. To sport a ReadyBoost logo, the thumb drive will need to have a capacity of 512MB or greater, and provide throughput of 5MB per second for random 4K reads and 3MB per second for 512K random writes.
Developer Grant Gibson offers a compatibility list on his site. Readers submit the results of their tests. He recently reported that of the 364 devices tested as of Jan. 25, 59 percent work with Vistas ReadyBoost.
One issue that may be adding to the failure problems with the thumb drives is that the flash memory used must be from SLC (single-level cell) technology. This architecture offers more robust performance than the multilevel cell flash entering the market. However, users cant tell the levels from the outside.
Microsoft is naturally gung ho for these flash technologies, and it launched a marketing campaign on OEMs and the media last summer and fall. The beefier caching can improve the Vista experience (always a good thing), and the schemes address directly some specific knocks on of Windows XP performance.
Vista appears to want all the memory that you can throw at it, flash or standard DRAM. Will customers balk at purchasing notebooks with multi-gigabytes of RAM? Click here to read more.
Whereas Vista customers can take a thumb drive out of the desk drawer and try out ReadyBoost right away for themselves, the hybrid hard drives needed for ReadyDrive are still under development.
Several storage companies announced hybrid drives in mid-2006, including Samsung Semiconductor, the worlds leading manufacturer of NAND flash as well as a maker of hard drives, and Seagate Technology, the leading HDD manufacturer.









