Micron: Thailand causing demand pick-up for SSDs

From CNET News.com: Micron Technology said today that demand is increasing for solid-state drives in the wake of the flooding in Thailand.

Since late summer, the prices of traditional spinning hard disk drives have been steadily rising because of shortages due to flooding in Thailand. That country accounts for about 70 percent of global hard drive-related production. And recently Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman said that large customers are calling HP because they can't get drives.

Micron Technology, one of the largest flash memory chip manufacturers in the world, told CNET today that the solid-state drive industry has seen orders spike.

"Clearly there's an increase in demand because of the Thailand flooding. There's fewer hard drives and open slots and an SSD can fit in that slot nicely," Kevin Kilbuck, Director of Marketing for Micron's NAND Solutions Group, told CNET today. Kilbuck is referring to the fact many SSDs today can plug into the same slots inside PCs that have traditionally accommodated HDDs.

And ultrabooks are also driving demand. "Look at ultrabooks. Because ultrabooks will either be 100 percent SSD or using a small SSD as a cache plus a hard drive," Troy Winslow, director of marketing for Intel's Flash Division, told CNET today.

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