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Return to Virginia Business - April 2002

Giving hard drives the boot

The folks at Indigo Memory Systems have a vision of a world where the term "booting up" is obsolete. Imagine turning on your computer in the morning and having it come on as quickly as a television set. Even techies with the fastest state-of-the-art computers can't make that claim.

Chantilly-based Indigo is developing a mass storage memory device - for which it holds a patent - that could ultimately replace the need for a computer's hard drive. "The hard drive is a severe bottleneck in computing today," says Kenneth Nunnenkamp, Indigo's vice president. "The hard drive operates exponentially slower than the rest of the computer." Indigo hopes that by removing that bottleneck, computer processors will run programs faster and perform functions such as video streaming just like a TV.

Unlike the traditional hard drive, Indigo's storage device has no moving parts. "The hard drive is a mechanical device with hundreds, perhaps thousands, of moving parts," Nunnenkamp says. "As such, its speed is severely limited by the fact that moving machine parts can only go so fast. Rather than having its speed dictated by how fast the electronics or software operate, hard drives are limited by such things as RPMs and arm speed." While other alternatives do exist, they have other limitations. "The key then is to develop a device that is fast, has large storage capacities and is inexpensive."

How does it work? "The storage device converts digital data to electronic signals and electronically scans them over a magnetic media. The magnetic media is located inside a data storage unit. An electronic controller … operates as the brains of the device, determining how stored data will be accessed and scanned."

Indigo has been researching its mass storage technology since the mid '90s. Since then, the firm has raised more than $5 million in funding from angel investors, venture capital firms and equity investments. The company plans to begin testing its beta prototype next year and hopes to introduce its technology - comparably priced to hard drives - to the market in 2004.

- Leila Marija Ugincius



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