Intel and Micron Partnership Soon To Launch 10TB SSD For Enterprise Market (hothardware.com)
MojoKid writes: Intel and Micron have been tag-teaming various storage and memory technologies and word on the web is that the fruits of that partnership is a 10-terebyte SSD that's right around the corner. The largest SSD in Intel's stable at the moment is 4TB, which itself is pretty large. However, both Micron and Intel are of the opinion that typical planar NAND flash memory has gone about as far as it can go, and that 3D stacked Flash memory is the future. They've also developed a "floating gate cell" design - a first for 3D stacked memory - resulting in 256Gb multi-level cell (MLC) and 384Gb triple-level cell (TLC) die that fit inside of a standard package. The two companies are targeting gumstick-sized SSDs reaching 3.5TB and regular 2.5-inch SSDs hitting (and even surpassing) 10TB. Apparently that's about to become a reality.
Density is now up to and surpassing "spinning rust" and durability is arguably as good or better. But price per gig is not quite there yet. However, I suspect it is coming!
Never trust reporting from a source that can't spell "Terabyte" correctly. It proves they not only didn't proofread, they didn't even run spell-check.
How much storage space do you use for your personal needs?
The new Intel/Micron "flash successor" that's supposed to be faster and more durable?
Cuz I don't spend more than $500 on storage. Period.
At 50 cents a gig, these things will still cost 5 grand.
I've said for a while now, that Spinning Hard Drives are dying breed. This is just another nail in the coffin, as SSD sizes start to surpass traditional HDD. The last remaining bit that HDDs have over SSD is cost per MB. However if you include OTHER costs associated with HDDs (Watts per drive) even those advantages shrink (or go away).
IMHO once these higher density SSD drives arrive, there will be little or nothing for me to recommend standard HDD, for any application. None. There is barely any reason to have spinning drives right now.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
Really? A terebyte?
Come on guys, at least try.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
One advantage is duration of information storage with the power off.
SSD have a temperature dependent decay probability of the bits.
It is shorter than the persistence of the magnetic bits.
So my plan is a 1TB SSD, that gets backed up to a 1TB rotating disk that is powered off most of the time.
"The statements are actually completely accurate, but a bit misleading. First, this is about what JEDEC requires, not what actual SSDs deliver. Second, this is when SSDs are stored in idle at 55C. And third the JEDEC requirements for minimum off-time data-retention are only 3 months @40C for enterprise-grade SSDs and only 12 months for consumer SSDs at 30C. These are kind of on the low side, although I have lost some OCZ drives that were off for just about a year. (Never buying their trash again...)"
http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/15/05/10/0936213/enterprise-ssds-powered-off-potentially-lose-data-in-a-week
it's a nice demo of what they can do some day.
Try and find it on the Samsung website. It's not there.
> When the SSD PM1633a be available for customers, and what will they cost, Samsung has not yet revealed. (translated from the German)
http://www.golem.de/news/pm1633a-samsung-zeigt-weltweit-groesste-ssd-1508-115698.html
The Samsung product is based on an incremental development of current semi-conductor tech. It's a good product but hardly revolutionary.
Intel/Micron product is based on a new technology that is very different from standard semi-conductor memory devices. If we're to believe their published data, it has much higher performance than the current tech.
If this stuff works the way they claim it does, Intel/Micro isn't playing catch-up, they're playing leap frog.
What's the target market for something like this? CERN? Arecibo? I would have thought that for speed reasons, anyone needing to store terabytes of data in a big hurry would use RAID arrays, in which case using fewer drives for the same capacity might actually slow them down.
How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
They already have a 3.84TB ssd in a standard notebook hard drive size. Intel has something similar, but the height is much larger.
what I wrote above was only partially right.
I found some better written articles and it sounds like the Intel/Micro 10TB drive is also based on 3D NAND, not 3D XPoint.
So that means that both Intel/Micro 10TB SSD and the Samsung 10TB SSD are basically a much of a muchness. They use very similar technology and are both vaporware.
Glad a researched tech that took years to developed is finally hitting production even though there's no consumer release yet.... so hopefully it will be out and see what the price point for it is.