Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Which markets are appropriate for SSDs?
A: The markets first to adopt SSDs are those who can most enjoy the benefits of SSDs over HDDs - Ruggedness, reliability, performance and power consumption are most crucial to mobile PC users, high-power users such as gamers and corporate users.

  • The business laptop market in particular, is a prime target for SSD adoption. Not only will SSD benefits increase employee productivity, business efficiency and reduce IT costs (as they require less repair and maintenance), but when the TCO (total cost of ownership) is taken into account, this clearly justifies the investment.
  • As for corporate and private mobile user- those users who are frequently on the road will value the ruggedness and reliability of the SSD compared to the fragile mechanical components of the HDDs. Their crucial data will be safely stored without risking data loss as a result of disk drive failures and crashes..
  • Enthusiatics, DIYs and Gamers - The Do It Yourself (DIYs) and Enthusiastic consumers are the early adopters consumers that are keen on owning the latest technology out there. The Gamers are consumers who use their PCs for gaming and are looking for the most efficient PC performance to enhance their gaming experience. Both are expected to have a keen interest in SSDs as it symbolizes a step beyond the traditional HDD storage technology as well as provide an enhanced user experience.

Q: Why should I pay more per GB of SSD storage when I can pay less and get much more storage with an HDD?
A: The issue is not the cost per GB, but the cost per device. How much is a particular user willing to pay for a storage device to get a particular job done? We have learned from corporate CIOs that they are willing to pay a 10-20% premium for a laptop with an SSD. Not all users are storage hungry. Corporate users such as road warriors, for instance need capacity of about 100GB to get their work done, and then are much more concerned with productivity and user experience. Flash addresses these concerns directly by offering durability, fast computing* and power efficiency. As SSDs continue to make their way into mainstream adoption, prices will become more attractive and SSDs will be available at higher capacities to a growing population. The question is no longer if SSDs will be adopted in computing applications, but how quickly such adoption will take place in the various sub-segments.
*Based on SanDisk internal testing using Microsoft Windows Performance Tool Kit. Performance varies depending upon OS and application. Platform: Dell Optiplex 760, Intel Core 2 Processor E8400, 2GB DDR2; OS: Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate; HDD:Seagate HDD 7200.4 RPM 250 GB; SSD: RC304 60GB.

Q: Why would anyone spend more money on a laptop with a solid state drive than one with a hard disk drive?
A: The benefits of flash - durability, faster computing*, and power efficiency - are worth their cost to mobile PC users who put a price tag on productivity, data accessibility and their personal user experience. They can't afford to lose their data or compromise their productivity when their hard drive crashes. Their laptop's speed is critical to them. Their time is literally worth money.
*Based on SanDisk internal testing using Microsoft Windows Performance Tool Kit. Performance varies depending upon OS and application. Platform: Dell Optiplex 760, Intel Core 2 Processor E8400, 2GB DDR2; OS: Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate; HDD:Seagate HDD 7200.4 RPM 250 GB; SSD: RC304 60GB.

Q: When do you expect the mainstream consumer market to endorse SSDs and how big will this market be?
A: Analysts predict that by 2013 the cost of a unit of storage will be attractive enough to interest the mass market and will be adopted instead of HDDs in 20% to 30% of client computers. By then market education of flash benefits will have penetrated from the early adopters to the mainstream.

Q: Will SSDs completely replace hard disks the way flash products replaced 35mm film and floppy disks? Or will SSDs and HDDs live side-by-side?
A: Today, we see SSDs living side by side with hard drives. Hard drives are not going to disappear anytime soon, though SSD technology has the potential to encroach on certain traditional hard drive territories at a growing rate.