Software

Will Windows 7 Kill SSD-based Netbooks.

Intelň€™s Josh Bancroft made an interesting comment in a blog post the other day, claiming that Windows 7ň€“which might very well require more hard space than Windows Vistaň€”is going to make for cramped working conditions on your average Netbook. Whyň€™s that? According to a report from Pricegrabber.com, only eight of the current ten best-selling netbooks even run on SSDs, and of those, both run 8GB solid-state drives. Bancroft estimates that a full Windows 7 installation, even of Microsoftň€™s barebones Windows 7 Starter package, could eat up to 6GB of working space. That doesnň€™t leave much room for other programs and files, even given the limited amount of use a Netbook offers. Whatň€™s to stop consumers from picking up a similarly priced Netbook with greater-than 100GB hard drive? While Windows 7 could theoretically become the final nail in the coffin for solid-state drives on Netbooksň€”at least until the market sees larger capacity drives at similar price pointsň€”other signs point to a blasÓ© consumer attitude toward flash-based Netbooks. According to Pricegrabber, only 11 percent of consumers would absolutely purchase an SSD-based Netbook compared to 14 percent that would shy away at all costs. The largest voting block, 43 percent, would require ň€śconsiderableň€ť price drops before they would consider purchasing an SSD-based Netbook. The cost-per-gigabyte ratio of solid-state drives is just too large to justify the purchase, suggest 54 percent of surveyed online users. Right now, conventional hard drives average around an eight-cent-per-gigabyte ratio, whereas solid-state drives are approximately 75 percent times that figure at $6.12 per gigabyte. At those pricesň€”even given an SSDň€™s reported speed benefits of twice as fast boot times and eight times the data writing capability of a magnetic hard driveň€”itň€™s easy to see why DRAMexchange doesnň€™t see many SSDs jumping into Netbooks during 2009.Ň  According to the research firm, short-term demand for solid-state drives will be brought on by the enterprise market.Ň  Expect to see less than ten percent of all low-cost PCs using solid-state drives in 2009.


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