The memory market is expected to reach some sort of equilibrium next year, as
consolidation helps to correct some of the imbalances in the sector, according
to memory maker Kingston Technology.
"As the impact of the economic downturn starts to hit home, it is likely that
some of the smaller players in the memory market will have increasing
difficulties and may not survive," said John Tu, president and co-founder of
Kingston Technology.
"Too many companies producing memory chips have caused prices to fall over
the last months and consolidation should help the industry correct itself."
Tu foresees demand for Flash memory continuing to grow, particularly for
high-capacity, high-performance Secure Digital cards as users adopt
high-definition video and photographic devices.
"Secure
Digital High Capacity currently has a ceiling of 32GB, but this format may
change during 2009 to enable the production of higher capacities," he said.
However, the increased demand for Flash memory will further drive the need to
protect data stored on any removable storage device.
"The rise in the number of high-profile data loss scandals has shown that
data is at risk when the proper procedures are not in place and the right
technology is not used to ensure that data isn't so vulnerable," said Tu.
"The next year will see the demand for hardware-encrypted USB Flash drives to
increase as well as the capacities that are on offer."
Although Tu expects increased demand for removable Flash memory, he does not
see solid state drives (SSDs) becoming fully mainstream next year, despite their
popularity for use in netbooks.
Although vendors will continue to invest in the technology, he believes SSDs
are still too costly when compared to traditional hard drives.
Tu maintained that the technology will continue to mature, having gone
through some reliability growing pains this year, and that a higher level of
industry standards will emerge as SSDs gain traction.
Virtualisation will continue to be a hot topic, according to Tu, and will
remain at the top of the IT manager's agenda.
"With regards to memory, IT managers are likely to start looking at ways to
get increased return on investment and improved total cost of ownership from
their virtualisation projects," he said.
"This is likely to come from increasing the memory capacity for virtual
servers. Higher memory capacity also enables improved virtual machine
performance and scalability."
Green IT will also continue to be a talking point, but the focus will shift
even further to the associated cost savings rather than the direct environmental
impact.
"Spiralling energy costs are impacting everyone, so if companies can use
lower energy IT equipment it won't be solely for ecological reasons but because
it is good for the bottom line," he concluded.
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