Thursday, June 9th 2022
OEMs Under Pressure from Microsoft to Stop Use of HDDs as Boot Drives from 2023
PC OEMs have revealed to market intelligence firm Trendfocus that Microsoft wants them to stop the use of hard-disk drives (HDDs, or mechanical hard-drives) as the main boot device in products powered by Windows 11, from 2023. It's not known how the company will go about enforcing this. One theory holds that it may amend the Minimum System Requirements for the operating system to specify a flash-based storage device, such as an SSD. If push comes to shove, the OS could even refuse to deploy on a machine with an HDD as the boot device.
What's also not known is how this affects SSHDs (hard drives with tiny flash-based storage media and an access-based data-juggling mechanism). Microsoft's decision should come as a boon for entry-level notebook and desktop buyers; as this segment sees OEMs use HDDs as the boot device, the most. There could be a push toward at least DRAMless QLC SSDs, or even single-chip SSDs. Regardless, it's clear that 2.5-inch HDDs are on their way out of the industry. HDD as a technology may still exist in the 3.5-inch form-factor, as they are in high demand from the data-center and surveillance markets as cold storage devices.
Source:
Tom's Hardware
What's also not known is how this affects SSHDs (hard drives with tiny flash-based storage media and an access-based data-juggling mechanism). Microsoft's decision should come as a boon for entry-level notebook and desktop buyers; as this segment sees OEMs use HDDs as the boot device, the most. There could be a push toward at least DRAMless QLC SSDs, or even single-chip SSDs. Regardless, it's clear that 2.5-inch HDDs are on their way out of the industry. HDD as a technology may still exist in the 3.5-inch form-factor, as they are in high demand from the data-center and surveillance markets as cold storage devices.
93 Comments on OEMs Under Pressure from Microsoft to Stop Use of HDDs as Boot Drives from 2023
MS most likely wouldn't give a damn about a small business like yours - nor are you likely to be buying your OS licences directly from them - but major OEMs that licence Windows directly from MS are subject to MS' contractual terms for those purchases. And if the licences are granted for use on hardware where the boot media is not an HDD, then they have to abide by that or risk the licence being revoked. That would be perfectly legal.
Indeed
There will only be trouble if ms mandates storage being on an ssd.
Then shit will hit the fan then we can just sic Lex on them :laugh:
Or did you not notice you cant sell windows 11 machines on a pentium 4, or windows 10 machines with 512MB of ram.
It's always been this way. You just never noticed.
Stop the arguing... take your arguing to PMs.