Interesting.
I have a Nikon D90 digital SLR, which uses SD cards instead of compact flash cards, and I use the Sandisk 30 MB/sec SD cards with that. I did a quick and dirty test of plugging one of these cards into the W700's 7-in-1 card reader, and got about 10.6 MB/sec while downloading 182 MB of photos. That would equate to about 1 minute 36 seconds per gigabyte. Testing with a full card (8GB in this case) would probably yield a more accurate transfer rate measurement. I don't have the compact flash reader option on my W700, just the standard 7-in-1 card reader.
So I'm not talking about compact flash memory cards in this case, but instead SD memory cards. My measurements are just another point of reference.
Here's one article about the compact flash issue on the W700, but I would probably have tested it by downloading photos from the card, instead of their approach of using a hard drive testing program. Downloading photos would be more of a real-world test.
Anyway, they achieved 30 MB/sec with an external SanDisk USB 2.0 compact flash reader and a 30 MB/sec compact flash Sandisk card, and only 1.2 MB/sec using the compact flash reader option built into the W700. I don't notice a date on that article, but it's possible that this is influenced to some extent by driver issues.
And for anyone who's interested,
here's an article on compact flash in general.
If this is indeed a problem on the W701, and if I needed support for compact flash, then I'd probably order the machine without the compact flash reader option and instead install an expresscard compact flash reader such as:
http://www.amazon.com/Expresscard-Adapt ... B001DQLPHM
or use an external USB compact flash reader (note that not all USB compact flash readers are created equal).
ExpressCard 2.0 should have the same transfer rate limits as a PCIe 2.0 mini-card slot of 250 MB/sec (250 MB/sec for input, and 250 MB/sec for output, which is often stated as a total limit of 500 MB/sec). But note that some expresscards that you buy to plug into your expresscard slot use the slower USB 2.0 interface available within the expresscard connector, instead of using PCIe, so they're instead constrained by the USB 2.0 transfer-rate limit of 60 MB/sec (note that the above card uses PCIe).
Anyway, this is one more data point for people trying to figure all of this out.