@paynterr said:
Of course, by the time 64 bit is actually up and working on all hardware and software, solid state disks may have developed sufficiently (read - become cheaper) that we no longer need such a significant pre-load in VSL (or other plug-ins). They can simply read the data off the (solid state) hard-drive instead. It is worth remembering that the only reason for such a large pre-load (OK - only large because of the number of samples we have) is because of the latency of contentional hard-drives, which have to physically seek across the drive using a mechanical arm.
With the advent of solid state disks, it takes the same amount of time to find any piece of information on the drive - and it does that 100x times quicker than a conventional drive.
It is a funny time. I suspect that this race to get bigger and bigger memory on a machine may suddenly find itself redundant.
Of course, this also means that the concept of de-frag maybe becomes a thing of the past. Who cares if your data is all over the place on a solid state drive, if it takes the same time to access it wherever the data resides.
Interesting...
I don't think it will be a long way off before the concept of memory and hard-drives start to merge and we no longer think of the two as separate entities.
Yep. Very good points, right across the board. I do think VSL has been on the technology-pushing train for a while now - just look at how long it's taking the current technology to catch up with the MIR. I mean, as I understand it, the main reason we're still waiting is because the current technology still isn't up to the job - at least not enough to unleash MIR on the big public. But really, actual performance of chips hasn't improved at anywhere near the rate we would have expected 7-10 years ago. I mean, highly significant speed bumps were common back in the late 90s, but it just doesn't happen any more. Damned physics...
But the main point you made is the one about hard drives and ram kind of merging in the future. I think that's probably very true. And if you think about it that way, then having one's entire template on a single machine, given a hearty enough processor, will probably be a doddle! Nice. Oh, to dream...
J.