Tech Giants Push for NAND Flash Use in PCs

By Ed Oswald | Published May 30, 2007, 4:14 PM

Three companies are teaming up to promote the use of NAND Flash memory in PCs, forming a consortium to push forward the technology's use in a variety of applications.

The Non-Volatile Memory Host Controller Interface Working Group will be chaired by Intel, with additional support from both Dell and Microsoft. The organization is aiming to provide a standard programming interface for non-volatile memory systems.

Microsoft hopes promoting the technology would also advance the use of ReadyBoost and ReadyDrive, and Intel is also working on similar technology called Intel Turbo memory.

Both technologies make computers faster and more responsive by using flash memory for caching purposes. NAND can be rewritten up to a million times, and is quickly becoming more inexpensive as its use in a variety of electronic products becomes more widespread.

"Nonvolatile memory solutions enable better system performance and lower power consumption as well as facilitate additional benefits such as smaller form factors, quieter systems and improved robustness," Dell's technology strategy marketing chief Liam Quinn said.

With flash's popularity growing, the NVMHCI says a standard for a common controller interface is necessary to continue that growth, especially into the PC sector. Additionally, using NAND Flash memory for such purposes could then be ported to other operating systems.

A specification will be delivered by the second half of this year, and the group is actively seeking other supporters across the industry.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

if notebook use this as harddisk replacements, it will help the battery life.
I hope it will available soon

Score: 0

|

I think that what might happen with the NAND memory would be to put parts of the OS (drivers/etc) into NAND. It would be much faster to read it off of this than your hard drive and it would be quicker than loading it into RAM each time you boot. Almost like having the OS resident at all times. The only writing would really be the patches and such.

With Readyboost, I believe the idea is to put parts of programs that are loaded frequently into the NAND cache - so the OS could watch what you run most often and put the pieces it needed to access more frequently.

It could make the PC work like a CE device, where you power on and are up and running almost at once. The OS could load off of NAND and then it can get the other drivers, etc that needed to be loaded off of the hard drive.

That would be sweet!

Score: 0

|

wonder when the first virus that does 1 mil rewrites comes out.

Score: 0

|

My guess is about the same time the monkeys on this site write the works of Shakespeare.

And both for about the same purpose! So you then have a duplicated Shakespeare (I am sure someone else needs a copy), and after 1million rewrites the NAND memory is dead.

And?

Score: 0

|

However, they've discovered that Nand can re-generate when inserted in a sodomical orifice for an extended period of time.
It's true! It's a chemical reaction!!
Why do you think the flavor of arse is identical to a penny's?

Duracell, the copper-topped battery.

Score: 0

|

Google Buzz: Another attempt to harness the content firehose

Similar to how Google successfully remolded RSS into a Google tool, the company now wants to remold Gmail into one big Google party

Success: Google's Nexus One shipping support line takes tech support questions

UPDATED Though the support line had been set up for shipping, it now appears Google personnel are happy to hear technical concerns.

Goodnight, moon: What I learned from a space shuttle

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: Can the tech sector learn a few lessons from the space program? Certainly, if you believe in learning from someone else's mistakes.

Netflix to FCC: NBCU + Comcast could bypass net neutrality

Weaning itself from the post office as its main means of video transfer, Netflix would like someone to ensure the Internet remains just as unencumbered.

Rhapsody to become an independent company

RealNetworks and Viacom subsidiary MTV Networks have begun the process of spinning off music service Rhapsody into an independent company.

Nvidia debuts new dynamically-switched graphics card technology

Today, Nvidia announced that its Optimus technology for GPU switching will soon be available in a handful of Asus notebooks.

Google lowers 'unusually high' early termination fee on Nexus One

Google has lowered the Nexus One's early termination fees which were twice as high as the norm.

Netgear and Ericsson introduce a mobile broadband hotspot with a twist

It's a mobile broadband hotspot, but it's for use in the home.

Report: Streaming video drove 72% global increase in mobile data consumption

A new study says streaming video is "the single most influential factor driving the need for increased mobile network capacity."

Stymied by continuing Nexus One 3G issues, Google blames the environment

If you're still afflicted with the 3G flip-flop trouble, then you might consider moving. That appears to be the only suggestion Google can give for now.

Wolfram|Alpha makes a strong argument for virtual keyboards

"Answer engine" Wolfram|Alpha has updated its iPhone/iPod Touch app, harnessing the strength of the virtual keyboard.