Toshiba Begins Selling MacBook Air SSD
Lucas123 writes "Toshiba has made the solid state drive used in the new MacBook Air generally available for use by equipment manufacturers. At just 2.2mm thick, the company said the drive represents a new form factor that is about one-third the thickness of a thin hard disk drive and that is 42% smaller than even a mini-SATA SSD module. The new Blade X-gale SSD series has a maximum throughput of 220MB/sec. and can store up to 256GB of data."
No, but your desktop system will fit into a manilla envelope.
Now where do I install it?
Up your airs of course!
Grammar fail. That's what comes from changing your sentence structure half way through without re-reading the whole thing again.
Can we install more than one of these in a system and then configure them like a RAID 0 array?
I'd like to connect four 250GB SSD modules together to form a 1TB portable RAID 0 SSD.