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Ready to Carry Terabytes in Your Pocket?

SanDisk (NASDAQ: SNDK) and Sony announced at the CES show plans for joint development of two new high capacity memory sticks that will expand flash memory into the multi terabyte (define) range. The two firms will work on “Memory Stick format for Extended High Capacity” (its tentative name) and “Memory Stick HG Micro.” The Extended […]

Jan 14, 2009
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SanDisk (NASDAQ: SNDK) and Sony announced at the CES show plans for joint development of two new high capacity memory sticks that will expand flash memory into the multi terabyte (define) range.

The two firms will work on “Memory Stick format for Extended High Capacity” (its tentative name) and “Memory Stick HG Micro.” The Extended High Capacity format will expand upon the “Memory Stick PRO” format currently used by Sony and will be the high capacity format, holding up to 2TB of data.

The HG Micro format is designed for high speed data transfers, with speed of up to 60 megabytes per second (MB/s), making it one of the fastest-smallest memory card formats to date.

Memory sticks are traditionally used in consumer products, like high-definition digital still cameras, DSLR cameras, and camcorders. By expanding capacity to the terabyte range, Sony and SanDisk see the thumbnail sized drives being used in other applications.

But don’t toss your 32GB Memory Stick PRO drives just yet. The higher capacity drives are years off. A SanDisk spokesperson told InternetNews.com newer, higher capacity drives would not reach the market this year.

It may seem ambitious to go from 32GB to 2TB in NAND flash memory, but Bob Merritt, principal analyst with Convergent Semiconductors, said NAND is actually advancing faster than standard DRAM memory.

“The cell structure of NAND is proving to be easier to manufacture than DRAM cells as they go past 50nm range,” he told InternetNews.com. “Many NAND guys are in 30 to 40nm range and NAND is driving lithography levels.” The cost per bit has been going down faster for NAND than standard DRAM, making it easier to manufacture NAND.

Merritt believes long-term, NAND is headed for higher capacities and moving into the datacenter, something Samsung has predicted in the past. He cited an IBM journal that said hard disk storage can’t keep up with the advances in semiconductors. “Therefore, a non-volatile memory technology will eventually arise to take a bigger and bigger piece of that market,” he said.

While it is possible for flash-based solid state disk (SSD) drives to become mainstream this year, he added that the technology needs to be shaken out over time, through real world scenarios, provings and experience that a lab test can’t fully simulate.

This article was first published on InternetNews.com. To read the full article, click here.

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Andy Patrizio is a freelance journalist based in southern California who has covered the computer industry for 20 years and has built every x86 PC he’s ever owned, laptops not included.

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