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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 13 declined, 3 accepted (16 total, 18.75% accepted)

Data Storage

Submission + - SSD Won't Make Sense In Laptops For Two Years (computerworld.com)

kgagne writes: "While solid state disk drives can vastly improve random read performance and are perfectly suited to most mobile devices, many operations are sequential in laptops and desktops and involve writes where SSDs most often lose to magnetic hard disk drives in performance. While introducing multi-channel flash memory controllers and interleaving the NAND flash chips increases performance, it will still be about two years before the cost versus benefit ratio will make sense to install SSD in your laptop or desktop PC, according to a Computerworld story. 'I think you need to get to 128GB for around $200, and that's going to happen around 2010. Also, the industry needs to effectively communicate why consumers or enterprise users should pay more for less storage," says Joseph Unsworth, an analyst at Gartner Inc.'"
Data Storage

Submission + - SSD Prices on Parity With HDD by 2010 (computerworld.com)

kgagne writes: "EMC executives were heavily pitching the virtues of solid state disk drives at their annual users conference in Las Vegas this week, saying that SSD will not only be on price parity with Fibre Channel disk drives by the end of 2010, but that NAND memory will solve all sorts of read/write issues created by spinning disk. EMC CEO Joe Tucci and storage platforms chief, Dave Donatelli, said the company will do everything it can to drive SSD prices down and adoption up deploying them in their products. One issue might be that EMC is using SSD from STEC, which is being sued by Seagate for patent infringement."
Media

Submission + - The Highest-Tech Home Theater You'll Ever See (computerworld.com)

kgagne writes: "Computerworld has a blog with video about an $18,000 home theater system that Intel set up at Storage Networking World in order to promote their new home server system. But what's really cool about this set up is that the server was connected to a 24" iMac, an Apple TV, an Xbox 360, a Wii, an iPod Touch, a Nokia N810 mobile Internet tablet, various cameras and a 15" wireless digital picture frame. The server was streaming all the various feeds to a top-of-the-line Pioneer Elite 50" plasma TV. The Intel reps said the high-definition movie downloads, which could be browsed through a menu, were as high quality as those from a Pioneer Elite Blu-ray player they had set up."

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