Hard drive rivals team up on hybrid drives

The top five hard drive manufacturers have teamed up to promote a new technology that will improve system performance and reduce power usage.

The Hybrid Storage Alliance - formed by Fujitsu , Hitachi , Samsung , Seagate , and Toshiba - will promote hybrid disk technology. The alliance looks to incorporate flash memory into standard hard drives.

Hybrid technology in Vista

The hybrid technology is supported by Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system, to be released on 30 January.

Windows Vista has a built-in feature called ReadyDrive that writes data onto the quicker flash memory chip instead of the standard hard drive. This speeds up booting up after a notebook computer has been put into hibernation or standby modes.

The Hybrid Storage Alliance claims that flash memory chips are now cheap enough to be built into hybrid drives without a huge increase in price. However, SanDisk yesterday announced its new 32GB flash-based hard drive, which will initially add $600 (£309) onto the price of a notebook computer.

The hybrid drives are expected to come become available later in the first quarter of 2007. Members of the Hybrid Storage Alliance will be demonstrating the technology at CES in Las Vegas next week.