The new gen drives are really about more capacity, anything else is just a bonus. They will have a new controller and with a bit of guess work from what I have been able to pick up so far write performance will be much improved and the effects of degradation will also be reduced. Add to this the high likelihood that native TRIM will be supported. That said if the performance increases will be perceivable by most users is another question.
Price is going to be interesting. Intel are telling their investors that “advancements will expand the value proposition and accelerate the adoption of solid-state drive (SSD) solutions in computing platforms” “Value” with Intel does not mean cheap because they link value to performance, so they are not likely to be as cheap as HDD for some time yet.
Accelerated adoption is really linked to three issues; price, capacity and reliability. Price is the number one problem to wider adoption, but the perception of technology readiness is also a real issue for people sitting on the side lines. The new drives should address a lot of the problematic issues that have put people off (assuming 34nm does not bring its own problems.) On cost Intel are again making their own NAND via their joint venture with Micron, so they are not at the mercy of external supplier price hikes. The issue is how many of these do they plan to sell to make a return on their investment. Hopefully they are planning to sell lots at a lower price.
Last edited by Ao1; 06-28-2009 at 02:38 AM.
It's the best consumer OS SSD, but by a small margin (in my opinion).
If it had higher sequential write speed then that would currently make it allot better for the times people have to HDDerase the drive and reload the OS.
So I do see what m^2 meant, by some of you trying to give the impression it's head and shoulders above the rest.
It's kind of a 285 Vs OC'ed 4890 amount of difference.
So I'm glad this new drive deals with the current drives Achilles heel as this was really the only major shortcoming.
Don't know whether to sell my x25 and pick up the newer one, or if there isn't any performance difference other than sequential write speed, to just pick up another cheap x25-m and raid 0.
Something must be happening because some ebayer's are selling these at £229.99 free shipping.
The only thing that might put me off, is if these don't support sata 6 gbs as that's just around the corner.
If they do not then I think they will be super seeded relatively quickly by the lower latency sata 6 gbs interface.
I named it already. ACARD beats it too. Or I should rather say - "Intels don't beat ACARD" because consumer SSD market is quite large and for some uses (i.e. laptops) ACARD isn't a great choice.
To sum up: Intel SSDs are neither pos nor something godly. They are just a product that might be the best if you specify strong enough constraints, but calling it "best consumer SSD" is still too much.
however, its basically the best SSD on newegg
all that other stuff is neither practical in its use in a STANDARD desktop/laptop and cannot be bought easily through retail channels
Quite simple really!
If you have saved an OS backup image to a couple of HDD's that are raided you should notice quite a large difference if your x25-m had faster sequential writes!
I know this to be true as my Raided Vertex's were allot faster when re-loading my OS than my x25-m.
Also some people like to backup their Apps/Games ect in ISO format. If the ISO's are stored on you raided storage partition, then this also saves allot of time if you ever want to do a complete fresh OS install as everything can be installed much faster.
So in this scenario installs would be quite allot faster if your x25-m write speed at least doubled.
edit: if you have a fairly new HDD then they wouldn't even need to be raided for you to see a benefit.
Last edited by Rhys; 06-28-2009 at 11:33 AM.
Perhaps I should let mis-info go unchallenged! Rather than using the dirty 'V' word!
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Hmm...will be interesting to see how these are.
Gigabyte X58A-UD3R | i7 930 @ 4 GHz | Corsair H50
G.Skill RipJaws 4x2 GB @ DDR3-1600 7-7-6-24-1N | HIS Radeon HD 5870
3x Intel X25-M 80 GB RAID-0; OCZ Agility 120 GB | Samsung SH-S243D
Corsair HX1000 | Dell 3007WFP & Samsung 204T | 7 Ultimate x64
I am guessing this is a refresh and not really new gen. SATA3 new gen coming later...
Asus Rampage Formula X48
Intel Q9650 @ 4.33GHZ
OCZ Platinum DDR2-800
Palit 4870x2
Creative Xi-Fi Extreme Music
Corsair HX1000
LL 343B Case
Thermochill 120.3
2xMCP355
KL 350AT
KL 4870X2 FC WB
DD Chipset Block
Rig 1:
ASUS P8Z77-V
Intel i5 3570K @ 4.75GHz
16GB of Team Xtreme DDR-2666 RAM (11-13-13-35-2T)
Nvidia GTX 670 4GB SLI
Rig 2:
Asus Sabertooth 990FX
AMD FX-8350 @ 5.6GHz
16GB of Mushkin DDR-1866 RAM (8-9-8-26-1T)
AMD 6950 with 6970 bios flash
Yamakasi Catleap 2B overclocked to 120Hz refresh rate
Audio-GD FUN DAC unit w/ AD797BRZ opamps
Sennheiser PC350 headset w/ hero mod
Mmmm sweet. I was so tempted to nab up 1 or 2 of the drives (80 or 160's) but now that these are coming out soon, I'll just wait it out to my planned Win7 launch.
-=The Gamer=-
MSI Z68A-GD65 (G3) | i5 2500k @ 4.5Ghz | 1.3875V | 28C Idle / 65C Load (LinX)
8Gig G.Skill Ripjaw PC3-12800 9-9-9-24 @ 1600Mhz w/ 1.5V | TR Ultra eXtreme 120 w/ 2 Fans
Sapphire 7950 VaporX 1150/1500 w/ 1.2V/1.5V | 32C Idle / 64C Load | 2x 128Gig Crucial M4 SSD's
BitFenix Shinobi Window Case | SilverStone DA750 | Dell 2405FPW 24" Screen
-=The Server=-
Synology DS1511+ | Dual Core 1.8Ghz CPU | 30C Idle / 38C Load
3 Gig PC2-6400 | 3x Samsung F4 2TB Raid5 | 2x Samsung F4 2TB
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