Evolution of Flash Memory [Infographic]


Flash is a hot topic. Not Adobe Flash, which can’t be used on Apple iPods or iPads, but Flash memory that provides the storage capacity used inside those same gadgets. While Flash memory is not a new technology, disk has dominated the enterprise space for many years. Flash’s capabilities were well suited for mobile devices and thanks to increased capacities and lower prices derived from high volumes in consumer usage, flash is back in the enterprise and new emerging cloud environments. Wikibon has been closely following this technology for many years and has a large body of research that is freely available for all to read and contribute to.

Enterprise Flash Storage is not a single product or use case; rather there are a full spectrum of offerings from start-ups and industry giants. Wikibon’s CTO David Floyer provided an excellent primer on the ecosystem with his 2011 Flash Memory Summit Enterprise Roundup. Wikibon held a Peer Incite on December 13 discussing how in the future, product data will live on flash, leaving disk to be used for raw and archive data.

We are excited to present this graphic, visualizing the evolution of flash memory and how it will change the technology landscape going forward. You can also listen to the recording of the session and read the full newsletter of new articles from the open research call. The embed code for this Infographic is on the bottom of the page and if you click on the picture, you will find buttons to share on social media sites.

Flash Memory [Infographic]

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  • http://theiostorm.com/Wikibon-infographic Gareth Taube

    Kaminario agrees with the points made in the infographic.  We’d just add that the battle will not be won solely on price/performance.  We believe that the flash that wins will be fortified with data protection, manageability and other benefits that come from being installed in a storage architecture that is purpose-built for SSDs.  We’ve expounded on this subject on our blog at www.theiostorm.com/Wikibon-infographic.

  • http://blogstu.wordpress.com stu

    Thanks @0419a9468546b8eb712b80dc9445ec69:disqus - absolutely there is more than price and performance. We covered the launch of Kaminario last year http://wikibon.org/wiki/v/Fusion-io_and_Kaminario_Join_Forces and look forward to tracking and discussing the expanding flash ecosystem in 2012 and beyond.

  • http://twitter.com/nstukltd Network Training

    Yes it will be interesting to see how the technology develops, particularly with regards to security

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