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Samsung unveils new solid state drive

Samsung Electronics Co, the world's largest computer chip maker, says has developed a new solid-state drive which is expected to replace hard disk drives in  laptop computers.

Samsung said its 256-gigabyte solid state drive (SSD) for data storage is 2.4 times faster than traditional hard drives. The company plans to begin production of SSDs this year.

The new SSD 'represents a bold step in the shift to notebooks with significantly improved performance and larger storage capacities,' the company said.

Samsung described the new SSD, 2.5 inches long and 9.5  millimeters thick, as the world's smallest of its kind. It can read up to 200 megabytes of data per second. It said that 35% of notebook computers would use the SSD by 2012.