Intel Replaces Consumer SSD Line, Nixes SLC-SSD
Lucas123 writes "Intel today launched a line of consumer solid state drives that replaces the industry's best selling X25-M line. The new 320 series SSD doubles the top capacity over the X25-M drives to 600GB, doubles sequential write speeds, and drops the price as much as 30% or $100 on some models. Intel also revealed its consumer SSDs have been outselling its enterprise-class SSDs in data centers, so it plans to drop its series of single-level cell NAND flash SSDs and create a new series of SSDs based on multi-level cell NAND for servers and storage arrays. Unlike its last SSD launch, which saw Intel use Marvell's controller, the company said it stuck with its own processing technology with this series."
The 320 series isn't quite as impressive over the X25-M G2 series as I had originally hoped, so will likely be quite some time before I bother replacing the current one (and move that into the laptop instead).
Still, an update has been due for a long time now the X25-M G2 is ancient in SSD terms. Just hope the new controller is as reliable as the Intel one found in the old drives.
Well and I'd argue that on modern Windows the extra expense really isn't worth it for a lot of regular users. RAM is cheap and Windows 7 Superfetch will quickly learn what programs you launch and when, and lets face it no SSD beats RAM.
I maxed my board out at 8GB and with Superfetch frankly everything I normally use launches as fast as I click it since with my predictable behavior Windows 7 simply loads it into RAM at the appropriate time. Considering maxing out most boards costs less than $100 and hybrid sleep makes shut downs kinda pointless unless you have a program that requires serious I/O for the average user there simply isn't a point in going SSD, not when 2TB drives can be had for $80.
Too bad SSDs didn't come out 10 years ago as it would have been most welcome when everyone was stuck on IDE with tiny caches and lousy memory management, for the "Average Joe" with plenty of RAM, big caches on the HDDs, and Superfetch preloading programs into RAM based on time and usage patterns? Kinda pointless IMHO especially at the prices per GB.
The only ones I've sold have been to my ePeen "Must have the highest benchmarks!" gamer customers and playing with their PCs other than bootup I really couldn't feel a difference. That is why I've been telling my regular customers and those wanting new builds to max out on RAM first and then if they still have money to blow after getting the rest of their wish list get an SSD for an OS drive, because frankly if their choice is RAM or SSD I'd always advise the most RAM as it'll get more use.
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
The $/GB metric is often irrelevant.
Bingo.
I know of a large company that is starting the switchover. They calculated that removing the loss in productivity caused by long OS startups more than easily pays for the cost of switching to SSDs. The math that you might use on your home computer doesn't always apply in the business world.
It took them 3 years or so to go down 30% in price, maybe. It'll probably take them 2 more years to drop another 30%, and after that 1 more year to drop another 30%. At which point they'll most likely hit a wall and they'll only drop variably 30% every year, year after year.
I speculate 5 - 10 years to beat the price / performance of conventional hard drives. That's the point at which your average consumer does not find any value at all in owning a conventional hard drive. Already, many enthusiasts are willing to make their main HDD a SSD even at current prices, there's demand here and it's going to drive up research and drive down prices as people thirst for more storage space at a lower price point with a higher speed. Many of those same enthusiasts still see value in have 2nd and 3rd conventional hard drives for cheaper and larger secondary storage. At some point their slow speeds combined with low price are going to meet or near SSD price points and consumers are simply going to purchase SSD all around.