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MCell HDD has 1GB of smart cache

Sep 5, 07 05:45 PM PDT

MCell HDD has 1GB of smart cache

There seems to be some confusion about the DTS MCell Hard Drive. It has been described by many sites/blog as a hybrid Solid State Drive (SSD) because it uses 1GB of DDR memory. Tell me if I’m wrong but standard DDR memory (Double Data Rate, commonly found in computers) is not a solid state storage at all.

SSDs are power-friendly
Solid-state means that the information stays even when there’s no electricity powering the memory. Flash cards or USB keys good examples of solid-state memory.

The DTS 1GB has a fancy cache but is not a hybrid SSD
In the case of the MCell HDD, the 1GB of RAM is loaded with an embedded software upon power-on. This software will act like an enhanced cache that should allow data request to come from the DDR memory, instead of the disk itself.

Still better than no cache
The 1GB of cache consumes power, even when no information is exchanged with the computer, unlike SSDs. However, the cache should reduce disc accesses that require a mechanical action (head moving) – which is very slow and more power-intensive.

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Legacy Comments

By Hubert , 06/09/07 9:07 AM (CommentID #292969)


MT, you're right. Thanks for correcting me on the definition. SSD was introduced has been introduced in the 70s when semi-conductors were replacing tubes.

I wanted to point out the difference between using volatile memory that needs to be constantly refreshed like RAM and non-volatile memory like flash that doesn't need the refresh.

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By MT , 06/09/07 5:43 AM (CommentID #292825)


I believe Solid state means that there are no moving parts everything is electronic instead of mechanical.. So DDR memory is solid state.

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