Toshiba cooks up 128GB NAND flash for next-gen phones and PMPs

Leave it to Toshiba to make even the latest smartphones feel somewhat undernourished. Quadrupling the current high-end standard of 32GB of embedded memory, the Japanese company has announced an all-new 128GB slab of storage, built on a 32nm production process. It’s somehow managed to fit sixteen 8GB NAND chips, plus their controller, inside a 1.4mm tall structure, and samples are about to exit the factory doors this September. A 64GB variant will also be making an appearance, with both scheduled to enter mass production sometime during the fourth quarter. Should go pretty nicely with that 2GHz beastphone Moto is planning, don’t you think?

Continue reading Toshiba cooks up 128GB NAND flash for next-gen phones and PMPs

Toshiba cooks up 128GB NAND flash for next-gen phones and PMPs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Jun 2010 04:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Pushes Out Fix for Evo 4G Storage Glitch

HTC and Sprint are moving fast to fix a storage card-related bug that left some early users of the Evo 4G smartphone frustrated.

As Wired reported Thursday, a problem with the 8-GB MicroSD card that ships with the HTC Evo returned error messages to some people when they tried using the phone’s camera app. The bug also prevented some people from saving files and documents to the card.

HTC has started pushing out a software fix to current and new Evo users, the same day the phone goes on sale at all Sprint stores.

HTC spokesman Keith Nowak confirmed that the updates started streaming out Friday morning so “anyone who currently has an HTC EVO 4G and people who are lining up to buy it today should not experience the issue.”

HTC and Google gave about 5,000 of the devices to attendees at Google’s developer conference two weeks ago, which is how many early users discovered the problem.

The Evo has been a much anticipated phone because of its position as the first 4G smartphone. HTC and Sprint unveiled the Evo in May. The feature-packed gadget has a huge 4.3-inch touchscreen, 1-GHz Snapdragon processor, a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera for video conferencing and a 8-megapixel camera for shooting photos and videos. (Evo’s MicroSD card has been manufactured by SanDisk.) Evo runs the 2.1 version of the Android operating system, and costs $200 with a two-year contract. Despite poor battery life, the phone has gathered positive reviews.

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Photo: (closari/Flickr)


Word of HTC Evo 4G storage bug couldn’t come at a worse time (update: OTA fix)

Word of HTC Evo 4G storage bug couldn't come at a worse timeIf you read our review of HTC’s awe-inspiring Evo 4G, you might have noticed that we recommended ditching the paltry stock 8GB microSD card and living large by throwing in a 32GB model. We were being a wee bit facetious, but as it turns out the advice was well-founded. We’re seeing reports flung far and wide across these great united internets about errors regarding “insufficient file permissions” when attempting to write to that packed-in card, others finding that the phone will simply fail to read the card altogether. Our first suspicion was bogus flash, like the counterfeit ones that plagued the Chumby, but HTC spokesman Keith Nowak indicated they have identified the cause and there’s an OTA fix coming “very shortly.” We know it’s early, and apparently not too many of you have rolled out of bed yet to get your Evo today, but sound off in comments if you’re seeing this issue as well. Meanwhile, we’re trying to replicate it on ours.

Update: Well, that was quick. Dre wrote in to tell us of a 13MB OTA update being pushed already, version 1.32.651.6, that looks to include a number of fixes including, apparently, a solution for this storage bug. We’re hearing it also breaks the root path that dropped yesterday, but it sounds like a decent trade-off for now.

Word of HTC Evo 4G storage bug couldn’t come at a worse time (update: OTA fix) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Jun 2010 06:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Storage Bug Hits HTC Evo 4G Phone Just Before Launch

The timing couldn’t be worse: As Sprint’s highly-anticipated 4G smartphone gets ready to go on sale, a glitch involving the phone’s storage media has cropped up.

A problem with the 8-GB MicroSD card that ships with the HTC Evo has left some early users frustrated. Some people who tried to take photos using the phone’s camera got error messages saying the device cannot save files to the SD card “due to insufficient file permissions.” Others found that the gadget could not access the SD card at all. Gadget Lab experienced it when testing the phone’s otherwise impressive camera.

The Android-based HTC Evo is the first 4G smartphone to hit the market. Google gave about 5,000 of the devices to attendees at its developer conference two weeks ago.

“It seems to be fairly widespread among those who received the phones,” says Andy Y, an Evo user who has been in touch with Google and HTC tech support over his faulty Evo SD card. “It’s a troubling trend.” He has posted extensively on an online Android forum about his experience, where he says about 20 people have complained of similar problems.

HTC spokesperson Keith Nowak acknowledged the issue.

“We have seen this crop up intermittently in some of the Evo 4G devices,” Nowak told Wired.com. “We have identified the cause, are testing a solution and expect to have a software solution available very shortly that will be automatically pushed to phones over the air.

“Many users are finding that a power cycle or switching the card out seems to rectify the issue, in most cases,” he says.

A Sprint spokeswoman says Sprint is aware of the issue but it is “impacting few of the devices.” The HTC Evo phones distributed at the Google conference are from the same shipment that Sprint will be selling in the next few weeks, says the spokeswoman.

It’s a troubling complication for HTC and Sprint as thousands of Evo phones will go on sale this weekend.

HTC and Sprint unveiled the Evo in May. The feature-packed gadget has a huge 4.3-inch touchscreen, 1-GHz Snapdragon processor, a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera for video conferencing and an 8-megapixel camera cam for shooting photos and videos. (Evo’s MicroSD card has been manufactured by SanDisk.) Evo runs the 2.1 version of the Android operating system, and costs $200 with a two-year contract. Despite poor battery life, the phone has gathered positive reviews.

Neil Lund, one of the attendees at the conference and editor of droidninja.com, says he faced the camera problem the day he started using his Evo phone.

“Some photos I had taken came up blank,” he says. “I attempted to use the Astro file manager app to read from the SD card and it wasn’t able to recognize it.”

Lund reformatted the SD card and still came up with errors. He says a separate 2-GB MicroSD card filled with music that Google handed out to attendees worked fine on the phone.

“My hunch is that a bad lot of SD cards went out,” says Andy Y, who uses the name “Bek” on the Android forum where he posts. He says he hasn’t seen the card-related errors since he installed a new SD card on his phone Wednesday night.

Sprint exchanged Lund’s SD card from his Evo phone “free of charge and with no hassle,” he says.

However, HTC’s Nowak insists its a software glitch. “All I know for sure is it is a software issue, which is why we can easily make the necessary tweaks with an OTA (over the air) update,” he says.

Nowak could not confirm when that update would be available.

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Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


OCZ reveals consumer-level RevoDrive PCIe SSD, blazing fast HSDL data interface

OCZ has a penchant for doling out new kit at trade shows, and this year’s Computex is no different. The star of the new-release show was the RevoDrive, a PCIe card with between 128GB and 480GB of SSD onboard. The unit we saw here in Taipei was near-final, with a pair of SandForce SF-1200 controllers, a daughter board expansion slot (for possibly combining two in a RAID scenario) and a promised starting price of around $400 to $600 (not to mention read / write times of nearly 540MB/sec). Obviously, this hits well below the multi-thousand dollar PCIe SSD options from Fusion-io and company, and it’s the first time we’ve seen PCIe SSD become even remotely affordable. If all goes well, the RevoDrive will start shipping within a few months. In related news, the company also announced that the Vertex 2 line of solid state solutions will be slimmed down for the 1.8-inch form factor (like you’d find in an iPod classic), but details on pricing or availability were nowhere to be found. Lastly, and potentially most importantly, the company revealed a fresh-out-of-the-lab prototype that could significantly enhance transfer rates from PCIe devices. Codenamed HSDL (high speed data link; shown above), the solution combines an industry standard SAS connector with an OCZ-built PCIe board in order to enable transfer rates as high as 20Gbit/sec. The company said a final product is at least six months out, but it’s already toying with the idea of selling a single and quad-slot card in due time. Peek the gallery below for more of what’s to come.

Continue reading OCZ reveals consumer-level RevoDrive PCIe SSD, blazing fast HSDL data interface

OCZ reveals consumer-level RevoDrive PCIe SSD, blazing fast HSDL data interface originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Jun 2010 22:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SanDisk works it harder, unveils G4 and P4 solid state drives

Still haven’t dropped a speedy solid state drive into your PC? SanDisk might just tempt you with its latest batch. At Computex 2010 the memory manufacturer announced its fourth-generation SSD lineup, consisting of the laptop-sized SSD G4 and the diminutive SSD P4 — those tiny mini-SATA netbook boards you see chilling outside Jefferson’s posh, nickel-plated mansion. The former will arrive in up to 256GB capacities with 220MB / sec read speeds and 160MB / sec writes (a sizable bump from prior numbers) while the latter range in size from 8GB to 128GB. Both feature the usual set of marketing buzzwords indicating speed and reliability, and both are slated to enter the OEM market in Q3 2010. That said, considering SanDisk’s recent track record here, we wonder if the company meant third quarter next year. PR after the break.

Continue reading SanDisk works it harder, unveils G4 and P4 solid state drives

SanDisk works it harder, unveils G4 and P4 solid state drives originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Jun 2010 18:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG-Hitachi HyDrive Puts SSD into CD/DVD

Notebook storage is a conundrum, and not only because of the confusion of acronyms and abbreviations (see headline, above). Your hard-drive is capacious but slow compared to an SSD (solid-state drive). The CD/DVD drive is used barely once a year, but it is used. And an SSD will let your computer boot and launch applications in no time, but you’ll only fit half you music library on there.

Hitachi-LG comes to the rescue with a hybrid optical and SSD drive which is a slot-in replacement for your existing DVD player. The HyDrive combines a battery-sucking, disk-spinning drive with a quiet and fast SSD of either 32GB or 64GB (with higher capacities to come). This way you get to put the computer’s OS and applications on the speedy solid-state section, keep all your movies and data on the slower HDD and keep that old-fashioned optical drive around for the odd DVD-rip or software installation. Everyone’s a winner.

Everyone except your pocketbook, that is. While prices haven’t been confirmed for the global September launch, Hitachi did let slip to Engadget that the HyDrive would add around $200 to the price of a machine thus equipped.

The other route is to lose the CD/DVD altogether and replace it with an SSD, either hacking it yourself or paying somebody to do it for you.

Hitachi-LG Data Storage Inc. (HLDS), today announced HyDrive [Hitachi-LG via Engadget]

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Hitachi-LG goes official with HyDrive: SSD-equipped optical drives landing in August

Hitachi-LG outed most of the major details for its forthcoming HyDrive last week, but the company just officially took the wraps off the world’s first SSD-equipped laptop optical drive. Frankly, it’s sort of astounding it took this long for such an obvious idea to come to fruition, but now that we’re here, we fully expect other outfits to follow suit. Put simply, the HyDrive is a standard form factor optical drive (DVD burner or Blu-ray will be available), but there’s a 32GB or 64GB SSD (not just a strip of NAND, we’re told) tucked below. When this gets stuffed within a laptop, you’re immediately able to access an optical drive, an SSD (for your operating system and critical launch applications) and a spacious HDD for storing music, media, etc. Previously, this type of three-drive arrangement was only available in beastly Clevo‘s and the like, but this solution is obviously tailor made for even ODD-equipped ultraportables. Another plus to the HyDrive is the integrated Defect Management technology, which essentially caches information from scratched discs (DVDs, namely) in order to play the content back sans jitters.

More after the break

Continue reading Hitachi-LG goes official with HyDrive: SSD-equipped optical drives landing in August

Hitachi-LG goes official with HyDrive: SSD-equipped optical drives landing in August originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 May 2010 00:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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5nm crystals could lead to vastly larger optical discs, mighty fine time machines

Blu-ray was already looking mighty fine at 25GB of storage per layer — and if Sony manages to make the indigo foil sheets hold 33.4GB each, we certainly won’t complain — but Japanese researchers have discovered a compound that could leapfrog Blu-ray entirely. Scientists at the University of Tokyo discovered that by hitting 5-nanometer titanium pentoxide crystals with a laser, they could get the metal to change color and conduct less electricity, leading to what they believe is an effective new medium for optical data storage. At 5nm, the small black crystals could reportedly hold 1,000 times the data of Blu-ray at the same density, and cost less to boot — the scholars reportedly synthesized the formula simply by adding hydrogen to the common, comparatively cheap titanium dioxide, while heating the compound over a fire. Ahh, nanotechnology — making our lives easier, one microscopic crystal or tube at a time.

5nm crystals could lead to vastly larger optical discs, mighty fine time machines originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 May 2010 03:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LaCie Delivers Network Storage for the Home

NetworkSpaceMAX.jpg

Looking for high-capacity network storage for your home? Check out the dual-disk gigabit network storage and media server just introduced by LaCie, the LaCie Network Space Max. It includes two high-capacity hard drives that can be configured for maximum security (RAID 1) or maximum capacity (RAID 0). RAID 1 delivers automatic disk mirroring, so you’ll have a backup if one drive fails.

You don’t need to be an IT pro to set this up. The Network Space Max comes with LaCie Network Assistant software to help you set up the server in minutes.

Included media server features let you stream files to any connected computer or UPnP/DLNA-compliant device, such as the PlayStationi3 or Xbox.

Capacity starts at 2TB, with a price of $279.99.