Friday February 10, 2012 3:46 PM AEST

Intel claims its SSDs are super fast

By The Inquirer
11:47 Jul 23, 2009 | 6 Comments
Tags: Intel | SSD | solid | state | drive | news
Intel claims its SSDs are super fast

New drives faster and cheaper than ever before. Schwing!

Intel has released new solid-state drives that are cheaper and have faster write speeds than their predecessors.
According to the company the X25-M SSDs for laptop and desktop PCs deliver close to double the write performance of Intel's earlier models.

Troy Winslow, director of marketing for Intel's NAND products, said the firm's 34nm process helped to keep prices down and better software was being used to speed up the SSDs.

As we reported two weeks ago, the 34nm process shrank the flash memory die, therefore reducing the cost by 60 per cent.

The new 80GB drive has double the write speed of its predecessor, with 6,600 I/O operations per second. The 160GB version gets an even greater performance boost, up to 8,600 I/Os per second, Intel said.

Read speeds are similar to the 35,000 I/Os per second of Intel's prior technology and so many users might not notice much difference between the two. However the real difference is that the cost of the newer SSDs is much lower, so they might start to gain favour against the normal hard-drive market.

Intel has a problem in that its competitors such as Toshiba and Samsung offer SSDs with capacities up to 512GB, so the 80GB and 160GB capacities of Intel's new drives might not cut the mustard for some applications. Intel plans to double the capacity of its SSD drives by next year, it said.

The X25-M SSDs come in 2.5-inch or 1.8-inch sizes. The X25-M 80GB SSD is priced at $US225 for quantities up to 1,000 units, while the 160GB version is $US440.

 

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6 Comments
sUpEr gEEk
Jul 23, 2009 12:27 PM
Just wondering do these SSD have the same restrictions as flash drives as in the amount of times up can read and write to.

Cheers
technotebook
Jul 23, 2009 12:48 PM
I do believe that they have (suffer?) a limited lifespan of writes to the Flash memory.

However one thing interesting thus far is that I have never heard of one actually failing. I could be wrong though.

Stuart
http://www.technicalnotebook.com
Trekker
Jul 23, 2009 2:37 PM
i want a 250 gig o/s sdd drive.. intel give me one. willing to pay up tp 700 bucks
strifus
Jul 23, 2009 11:47 PM
tech, the numbers show that the MTBF for the SSD is in the order of 4-5 years depending on usage. Most of us dont even have HDDs that old. By the time they are though, they are so small that we need bigger ones. Example, the largest drive in mainstream use about 5 years ago was the 120Gb drive. Its since been superceded by the 640 which are now the mainstream, if not the 1TB drives.
theone3
Aug 7, 2009 1:48 AM
Intel rates these chips as being able to write 100GB/day for 5 years before failure. (That's just a rule of thumb, e.g. 10GB/day for 50 years also works) When they fail, you can still read off the drive, you just can't write. Reads are unlimited - it's only writing that damages the cells over a period. Intel sells an X25-E which can handle like 1tb/day or so.
AViper2000
Aug 7, 2009 8:25 AM
Still quite costly for the per GB count...
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