Dec
24
2009
0

InnoDisk Presents 2 TB SSD

Taiwanese company InnoDisk, which specializes in the developments of flash drives, has just announced the release of new speedy SSD drive series – Matador II. These SSDs appears as PCI-Express extension card with capacity from 128 GB to 2 TB.

InnoDisk SSD PCI-Express

Matador II SSDs were developed for high-end gaming computers but it’s not the only application of new solid state drives. InnoDisk claims that technical characteristics of Matador SSD easily allow them to be used in servers and military systems. The key feature of new series would be excellent read/write speed as manufacturer promises (but we all know about their promises… :) Matador II is supposed to deliver data transfering speed for reading at 800 MB/s and for writing at 600 MB/s. That’s not a record, there’s other devices with great theoretical speed (like G-Monster Promise SSD with 1 GB/s speed), but that’s several times faster than today’s consumer HDD has. Of course  with such a performance it’s likely Matador will be not only as fast as spaceship but also as expensive as the one.

InnoDisk plans to ship 1 million of Matador 2 SSD drives in next year, that’s really a lot for relatively small company. I don’t think they will be able to do it, but they can lower global SSD price by trying. Time will tell.

Dec
18
2009
0

PQI SSD with USB 3.0: Read Speed of 274 MB/s is Pretty Awesome

PQI – one of the few manufacturers with USB 3.0 data storage device models . That would be two devices: external hard disk drive H566 and solid state drive S533. Both drives were recently released.

PQI SSD
External Hard Drive PQI H566 is prefabricated in 2.5-inch form factor and endowed with 8 MB of cache memory. It operates at 5400 rpm(revolutions per minute). Capacity of the model varies – 320/500/640 GB. Data reading speed for H566 is 105 MB/s, writing speed – almost 100 MB/s.

Let’s look closer to the more interesting second novelty – SSD disk PQI S533. It is made in the same form factor as H566 (2.5 inches) and supports USB 3.0 interface as well. SSD is available in 80 or 160 GB capacity versions. Its performance characteristics are really impressive: the writing speed reaches 198 MB/s and reading speed soars at 274 MB/s.  As we can see after brief calculation S533 runs almost six times faster than similar drives with old USB 2.0 interface. If S533 will really show such a performance in using it definitely will become desirable present for Christmas or New Year for any computer user.

PQI also has presented a memory card(Express Card) which has two USB 3.0 slots built-in.

Dec
17
2009
0

Seagate Intros its First SSD: Pulsar

Seagate Technology, the world’s largest hard drives manufacturer, announced its first Solid State Disk (Solid State Drive – SSD). Seagate Pulsar made in 2.5-inch form-factor has  height of 7 mm and is equipped with a3 Gbit/s  SATA 2. The SSD is designed for rackmount and other servers and allows to reduce energy consumption of data centers.

Seagate Logo

SLC(Single-Level Cell) lies at the heart of the drive technology, as it provides higher reliability in comparison with the multi-level structure technology, Seagate assures. According to the Seagate, Pulsar’s Annualized Failure Rate (AFR)  is 0,44%. AFR is equal to the Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) divided by the number of hours that the device worked for a year and expressed as a percentage. For example, if MTBF is 1.5 million hours and the device operates 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, his AFR is 0.58%. Basically AFR is probability of Failure for one year of the SSD usage. As for the interface SATA it was selected to meet wishes of Seagate’s clients, said the company.

Peak performance of Pulsar for 4KB-blocks is 30 thousands reads per second and 25 thousands write operations per second. Read speed of 30 thousand operations per second can be sustained by any Pulsar SSD while the write speed varies depending on the capacity of the drive – from 2600 to 10500 transactions per second (it’s pretty less than peak speed). Peak data transfer rate in the read mode is 240 MB/s, writing – 200 MB/s.

“Seagate is optimistic about the enterprise SSD opportunity and views the product category as enabling expansion of the overall storage market for both SSDs and HDDs,” commented Dave Mosley, Seagate executive vice president, Sales, Marketing, and Product Line Management. “Our strategy is to provide our customers with the exact storage device they need for any application, regardless of the component technology used. We are delivering on that strategy with the Pulsar™ drive, and you can expect additional products in the future from Seagate using a variety of solid state and rotating media components.”

Seagate Pulsar SSD

The drive comes in three versions – a capacity of 50 GB (ST950011FS), 100 GB (ST9100011FS) and 200 GB (ST9200011FS). There is protection against power supply failures – device has nonvolatile cache and in case of power supply interruption, sent  to the device, but not recorded in the flash memory data is not lost. SSD’s operating temperature varies from 5 to 60 degrees Celsius, harmless non-operating temperature – from -40 to +70.

According to officials of Seagate, Pulsar will be followed by other series of Seagate Solid State Drives. Ultimately vendor intends to provide solutions for networked storage systems of higher price range (such as EMC Symmetrix), midrange (Clariion), data storage systems with direct connections to the server (DAS) and blade servers, which Pulsar focuses . Commercial delivery of the Pulsar began in September 2009.

According to Gartner in 2010 will be sold twice the SSD compared to 2009, and the volume of the market value will reach $ 1 billion. Samsung was the first large producer of traditional magnetic disk which stepped on the SSD market. Western Digital company in March 2009 has acquired SiliconSystems, supplier of solid state drives, for $ 65 million.

According to analysts, the success of Seagate at the new market will depend on the existing relationships with the partners of the company like Dell, HP, IBM and other manufacturers of enterprise solutions. It won’t be easy for Seagate to get huge slice of SSD profit as it enters the market not first by the long way. In addition to the aforementioned Samsung here already a dozen manufacturers are presented, including Texas Memory Systems, Intel, Fusion-io, STE, and Pliant, Violin Memory and SandForce.

Dec
04
2009
0

Micron RealSSD C300: World’s Fastest SSD Drive for Notebooks and Desktops

Micron announced new SSD series with native SATA 6 Gbit/s interface support. RealSSD C300  is based on Micron’s 34nm MLC NAND technology, it also satisfies ONFI (Opena NAND Flash Interface) 2.1 standard. Manufacturer promises that using of newest SATA interface will allow SSD to reach incredibly high data read/write rates – up to 355 MB/s read and up to 215 MB/s write. That’s why Micron claims new RealSSD C300 would be the fastest SSD disk in the world for consumer market. Micron also states the SSD gets 45,000 score in PC Mark Vantage test suite, this result can really induce you to get one at home.

Micron RealSSD C300 1.8-inch SSD

Micron RealSSD C300 1.8-inch SSD

RealSSD C300 will be available in 1.8-inch and 2.5-inch form factor and there will be two version of storage capacity – 128 and 256 GB. But you have to wait for Q1 2010 to buy  it as now Micron only made paper announce. Price for the SSD hasn’t been disclosed yet, but be prepared to spend several hundreds of dollars for sure.

Dean Klein, vice president of memory system development at Micron says:

The C300 SSD not only delivers on all the inherent advantages of SSDs – improved reliability and lower power use – but also leverages a finely tuned architecture and high-speed ONFI 2.1 NAND to provide a whole new level of performance.

To prove all statements Micron released video presentation where you can see RealSSD C300  vs. 7200 RPM HDD comparison. Operation system loading time is shrank, application starting speed is increased, etc. All that benefits are shown in the video below:

Dec
02
2009
0

Intel Release Fixed “TRIM” Firmware Update for X-25M G2 SSD

Recently we reported on problems with the Intel firmware update for its SSD. New version of firmware  was supposed to speed up disk and activate the special control command (TRIM) in Windows 7. But with these improvements some users have received an addtitional surprise – their computers became unable to boot the operating system. After pour of complaints started to rush on Intel, the company quickly removed updated firmware from public access.

intel x25m sata ssd
But now, after a month passed, Intel is ready to give the consumers of its SSD new advantages of TRIM and accelerate their device. New firmware version 02HD together with the updating tool v1.5 should finally give the holders of a 160 GB SSD promised 40% sequential write boost. In the first reviews of users, everything works as it supposed to be , so if you own a Solid State Drive from Intel, you’d better get latest update.
That’s what Intel wrote about the release:

This firmware update tool provides the latest firmware for the following Intel SSDs in all capacities:
-  Intel® X25-M/X18-M SATA SSD on 50nm (black case)  - updates to FW version 8820
-  Intel® X25-E SATA SSD on 50nm (black case)             - updates to FW version 8850
-  Intel® X25-M/X18-M SATA SSD on 34nm (silver case)  – updates to FW version 02HD
This firmware will enable your SSD to deliver the best performance in your PC. Use this update tool to get the latest production firmware.

Written by admin in: Intel, SSD Drive, SSD Software |

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