Windows Vista: Ready for ReadyDrive
- Posted: Sep 27, 2006 at 11:50 AM
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- 24 Comments
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Reading data off of mechanical hard disks is an expensive operation since it is, well, a mechanical process that involves a very large number of seeks to gather data into a useful (contiguous) form.
Here, we meet Architect Ruston Panabaker who is on a team of talented hardware-oriented folks that have built native support into Windows Vista for hybrid hard drives. Hybrid hard drive? What's that? Tune in and learn. You'll also get to see how great Windows
Vista can perform on a machine with one of these new types of hard drives. Most cool.
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I think the hardware guys are doing some real good stuff.
I cant wait till Vista RTM. I really think its gonna blow us away, with all that speed
This have really huge potential. When the price for, for instance, for 1gb units, you could, in many cases, actually store all your data, from your "Users" folder, that contains all documents and stuff.
Is there any info on, how much power can you save, from using this hybrid drives?
With the new Core 2 Duo chips, that underclock themself drasticly, and are 65nm, and use next to no power, when on idle, this is really looking good.
Also, it seems like an ATA interface, and i think he said they actually had ATA interface.
What are the chances that we will see a SATA 2 interface? If that is gonna happen, i will buy a such drive, once they are out, for my vista system for sure.
Also, would it be an idea, to store the index of the harddrive(In context of the indexing service in vista), in the hybrid part of the drive?
-Joey
It was metnioned in the video that this will be controlled through registry settings, so yes this is configurable. He gave an example of being able to add LOB apps to the list of cached apps.
It makes me think ...
Today I can buy a 300GB hardisk at low cost, but still the mechanical factor makes it slow for loading Windows, VisualStudio, games and so on... Year by year the disk is bigger, but is not so faster.
So... thinking in year 2012 I hope not to have a market with 10TB disks still suffering with the "impedance mismatch" (if i can say it) of mechanical pieces. I would preffer to have a 100GB storage device, but purely electronic, fast and persistent.

Anybody knows if that kind of technology exists today, at least as a protoype? I mean... somenthing like a beyond-flash memory. Where are the links/articles about them?
I think the hard disk (for day-to-day working) should be the next piece on a museum, following the CRTs and Diskettes.
this is cool. But I think the real solution to the Hard-drive performance problem is to have hard drives with multi-reader heads, that will enable multiple queries or read/write operations happening simultanously. So, one can have a drive with a circular readors mounted on top of the hard drive surface, and these multiple heads will do the read write as the surface is spinning. So like a circle (heads circle ) on top of the actual surface (on top could be ont he top surface or bottom surface or both). So you have these heads organized in a circle on top or on the bottom surfaces of the actual drive surface doing Read/Write operations concurrently. This in addition to the hybrid idea can improve the performance significantly. Would not that be the case?
But cool Video. And the sound quality of this video is super.
This maybe vista only hardware at the moment but you can just see other parties stepping upto the plate to take advantage of this (as much as is feasable) in XP, unless MS provides this first.
part of me hopes that Microsoft has a patent on this new tech to prevent others from using it. make the other OS's think of something for them self.
Try a search for 'PRAM' or phase-change RAM.
http://www.samsung.com/PressCenter/PressRelease/PressRelease.asp?seq=20060911_0000286481
In terms of sheer economy (bytes/$), electronic memory isn't going to overtake magnetic memory for quite some time. However, PRAM promises to be comparable in speed and durability to system RAM but non-volatile (persistent) like flash RAM and supposedly even more scalable (currently you can get 16G flash drives).
I don't understand why this would/should be limited to Vista... This seems like the caching should be controlled in the drive firmware rather than the OS.
I would expect that you will soon see the cache utilization built right into the drive firmware so you get the same benefits of a flash cached hard drive.
This is not much different from SQL servers cache. The main difference is that you are using non-volitile ram rather than dram... so on power off the cache remains and can be used for booting as well. But, Personally, I leave my PC on all the time, so boot up time isn't a big deal.
BOb
Even better will be when we have more options is giong AMD for notebooks. The Intel versions are always slower and kick out more heat, yet they still seem to have a stranglehold on the laptop end of the market - at least 99% of those WORTH buying!
Not sure about patents. There probably are some, but likely just for defensive purposes. The technology uses ATA commands to control the cache.
How will Hybrid hard drive technology work out with striping RAID setups?
with the cost of flash dropping so fast and the small size I'd think they might build say a 1-4 gig flash buffer for not much more than the cost of a 256-512 one.
I see listings for 4 gig drives with the usb plug and packaging for less than 75 bucks, so in raw form 4 gigs must not cost too much?
esp if your a major OEM building millions of drives...
I really hope these come available asap!
Hey Chadk,
To answer your question about SATA 2: these drives will come in both PATA and SATA varieties. In fact, I would expect mostly SATA (and SATA 2) based drives moving forward.
Ruston
Shall this new hardisk work with existing Intel boards?
From the business point of this will really increase th business for both MS and HDD manufacturer too, but the touhg part for the Consultant when they have to convince the client to buy the new OS because no body wants to change the OS every 2-3 years and have to pay more. People don't want to invest again and again. Actually they don't understand the software. When they pay for th hardware they get smething which is physical but for the software they don't understand.
I must say that this feature should be for PCs, laptops, servers and handhelds too. And as they mentioned in the video that Flashdisk price are reducing half and size increasing double every year. So this gonna help alot.
Thanks to Vitsa/Windows Performance Team. You really did a good job cand thanks for Channel9 to brining this kind of infromation inside from Microsoft because today this viewo helped me to convince my client to go for Vista and what feature he can utilize and this was one of them.
What is the advantage of putting the cache in the HDD instead of on either the motherboard or a normal SATA connection?
To me, the disadvantage seems to be that you can't freely decide the size of the flash and can't add/remove the flash at a later time.
Hi Ruston,
It's Devon - amazing that I came across this interview of yours conducting research on mobile storage systems...
Congrats - sounds like a great innovation - I'd imagine this hybrid technology will be the magic bullet to enabling the upcoming terabyte drives to perform adequately even with extensive fragmentation.

Question - has this technology been designed to work in conjunction with RAID 5 (among others) to max peformance in both stripped sets and mirrored sets and combinations thereof? Could this point to a new RAID possibility or a new standard altogether? Any hints you can pass over the NDA?
Aside from that - how the heck are you????
A very long time indeed - I'm currently working as an IT Project Manager and Business Systems Analyst in the Scottish Borders, UK...
Love to hear from you sometime and catch up on what has transpired since J.D...
drop me a line at devon.leslie@gmail.com
Skype: devon.leslie
Best of luck on the launch - please give my best to anyone you still may be in contact with...
Regards,
Devon.
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