A New RAM Hard Drive from HyperOs

scorchio

New member
Gigabyte certainly created a stir earlier this year when it debuted its i-RAM solid state hard drivee composed of DRAM modules. Inside, the i-RAM offers a PCI-type add-in card that hosts four DDR memory modules and hooks up to a mass storage controller via Serial ATA. A battery unit backs up the data stored in the memory when the PC is powered down. The main feature of the i-RAM and RAM-based drives in general is their amazingly short access times and data transfer rates that easily exceed the bandwidth of common hard drive interfaces such as UltraATA or Serial ATA.The vendor claims the HyperDrive III is superior in many ways, as it offers more memory capacity and comes in a nifty 5.25" form factor.

Given their novelty, all solid state disk products have one major drawback: their prices compared to traditional hard drives are out of reach for most budgets. The devices remain far more expensive as measured by price per bits of capacity. However, products such as Gigabyte's i-RAM or the HyperDrive III by HyperOs Systems are priced more competitively since they contain standard components and their memory capacities are limited.
 
Samsung have developed a hybrid hard drive.

It was demonstrated to the company where i worked last year but i had to sign a non disclaimer before the demo. As the company i worked for has gone belly up i suppose i can now speak about it.

Basically it is a spinpoint drive that has a 1Gb flash card built onto it.

All the main boot files and swap files are stored on it, so when the computer is switched on teh system is already booting whilst the hard drive is spinning up.

It was due to hit the shelves second quarter of 2006 and was approx 10% faster than the spinpoint sata2 out know.
 
The Hyperdrive III uses memory modules it will come with 8 DIMM sockets:O

Allowing for a maximum storage capacity of 16 GB when equipped with 2 GB DDR DIMMs.Technically, it would be able to sustain as much as 8 GB of capacity, but there are no 2 GB unbuffered DIMMs available.The upcoming HyperDrive III version will feature both UltraATA and Serial ATA interfaces. This likely will improve its performance,operations are at least 35 to 50 times higher with solid state drives versus conventional hard drives.
 
A little more info

Retains data when the PC is restarted or shutdown by having an independent power supply connected to the main PC power lead through a PCI slot blanking plate.

Integral 160 minute 7.2v battery back up to cover electricity board power outages (1250 milliamp hours - on board trickle charge unit takes 48 hours to fully charge).

Quick backup possible with HyperOs 2004 or HyperOs OneClick and an integral 160 minute 7.2v battery back up to cover electricity board power outages. Also compatible with all UPS's.

Bootable IDE device.

Can be destructively reformatted (The HyperDrive III can perform a full format almost instantly).

Far more reliable than a Hard Disk (no head crashes and no moving parts).

Gramophone free design - no mechanics, pure silicon!

Silent!

A good hard disk can do around 40,000 stops and starts at 40 degrees centigrade (Hitachi/IBM Deskstar 180GXP). The HyperDrive III doesn't mind how many stops and starts it does because it has no moving parts.

The fastest hard disks today with ATA133 Buses provide a sustained data rate between 20 and 55 MB per second depending where the data is on the mechanical rotating platter. This figure is 93 MB per second for the HyperDrive III with an ATA100 Bus. The seek time for the HyperDrive III is at the silicon level (less than 100 microseconds) rather than the mechanical magnetic level (8 milliseconds). So the read and write times for the HyperDrive III are over 80x faster than a Hard Disk. This translates into the following real world benefits:

20,000+ inputs and outputs per second

XP installs on a HyperDrive III in around 4 minutes, rather than the 40 minutes that it takes to install on a Hard Disk.

'Instant' Desktop.

'Instant' on, after the BIOS and Hardware checks.

Does cost £400 for the 16gb version though!
 
16GB is not important - when you think you'l' probs just store your OS and perhaps a few choice benchies (PCMARK Anyone?) the rest can go onto your stanard RAID or SATA2 devices.
 
Me four! 8)

It's about time they moved to solid state - especially with the size of the iPods which are based around the same technology. You would really expect them to hit the market soon and with a low cost due to the high rate of manufacture...
 
Very interested in one of these - thanks for the info scorchio. will have to wait for the price to drop though.
 
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