Crucial M500 SSD Promises 960GB For $600
crookedvulture writes "SSD prices are falling as drive makers start using next-generation NAND built on smaller fabrication processes. Micron and Crucial have announced a new M500 drive that's particularly aggressive on that front, promising 960GB for just $600, or about $0.63 per gigabyte. SSDs in the terabyte range currently cost $1,000 and up, so the new model represents substantial savings; you can thank the move to 20-nm MLC NAND for the price reduction. Although the 960GB version will be limited to a 2.5" form factor, there will be mSATA and NGFF-based variants with 120-480GB of storage. The M500 is rated for peak read and write speeds of 500 and 400MB/s, respectively, and it can crunch 80k random 4KB IOps. Crucial covers the drive with a three-year warranty and rates it for 72TB of total bytes written. Expect the M500 to be available this quarter as both a standalone drive and inside pre-built systems."
Seems like this kind of drive is best suited for read only focused applications. Depending on what you're doing you could write 72TB pretty quickly on a 1TB drive.
My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
That's about 6x the cost of a hard drive, in terms of dollars per GB. If it was 2x or maybe even 4x I'd replace the RAID0 array in my gaming machine with one of these.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
While it's nice to see SSD capacities increasing, the real metric is the cost per gigabyte, which is still nowhere near conventional harddrives. A good number of us have massive multimedia collections; It's still cost-prohibitive to store all of it on SSDs. And at least for the short-term, a primary drive over 200GB isn't really something most users need. A select few, perhaps, but not many. This may be something more useful in the enterprise, but then... looking at the specs, it seems it wouldn't survive very long in a database server.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
if it were read, I'd agree with you, but there are a lot of things that don't get written /that/ often.
Primary OS, your application installs, main configuration files, possibly even some of your data.
Yeah, it'd suck for a swap/scratch disk, and for things like content files you may be working on (or the disk housing the current update/area info for your favorite MMO).
Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
I really don't care about extra capacity for SSDs. I just set up a new laptop with a 256 GB SSD for the OS and 2 750 GBs in a RAID 1 for safe storage. So long as the SSD is big enough for the OS and a few apps installed for speed, I'm getting my money's worth. Now, if the SSD craps out fairly quickly warranty or not, then I have a problem.
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
Do I have to click the link to see what "this" might be?
Since the amount of storage on SSD these days seems to be arbitrary and nothing to do with exponents of 2, how about creating nice rounded values, like 1000 GB.
Anyways, maybe this year will be the year of SSD, just like the last 30 years.
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
Granted, this is nearly twice as big, but the Samsung 840 (non Pro) can already be gotten for $349.99 for 500GB = $0.69...
I've been thinking about it...I wonder how I could transfer an existing Win7 install like that, in Linux it would just be a few lines in fstab...
Crucial sells a kit that lets you transfer the entire contents of a drive to a new one. Includes the hardware and software needed to hook up both drives. I did this with a Win7 laptop when I went to using a SSD. Worked great and did the whole job in about an hour.
Following the floods in Bangkok, HD production got going again, but the prices for these devices have not continued to fall as before. However, as this article points out, that is not the case with SSDs. The result? I suspect that sooner rather than later, significant numbers of people will start buying SSDs instead, realize the advantages over those old spinning platters of rust and then never look back. When the very few HD manufacturers that are now left finally realize the consequences of their greed and lack of willingness to compete against each other, it'll be too late and their profits will only continue to shrink.
For any useful application, I'll have to replace these like toner cartridges, probably even more often.
About every 3 years, if you write 65GB of data to them every single day. What the hell kind of application are you working with that requires you to write 65GB of data a day? I probably write closer to a couple of gigs a day, which means these will last for more like a hundred years.
"None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
Firmware Updates?
My Crucial SSD went poof, but it turned out Crucial said it could be reset (with my Windows PC only).
I hadn't kept the Firmware updated (& didn't know I needed to do so and was not warned about that). Then I read Crucial's note on how to update the firmware.
I simply couldn't understand all the crap I would have to go through. Either there is a one click firmware update or it is a royal pain to update and I won't buy.
It seems to address an issue that just isn't there for most people, in my view. For everyday computing needs 960GB SSD is just way overkill. I'm not a gamer so in my case my needs are even less. I've got a 120GB SSD as my primary boot drive (OS and Apps) with the rest of the data on a separate conventional 500GB drive. On my MacBook Pro it's using about 40GB on the SSD. My Windows laptop is using about the same amount of space.
Now if you're a gamer or doing video production or CAD or running a database server then, sure, the larger SSD is great. Incidentally, moving one of my Virtual Machines to the SSD didn't really give me any performance improvement over the regular HD which was kind of surprising to me. So I just moved it back to the HD. As others have mentioned, the performance increase over a conventional HD for bootup and app launching is simply remarkable. Once you get one you'll never go back.
it's a 3tb usb3 drive.
kinda boring really.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
LOL