Samsung reveals high-performance 64GByte SATA II SSDs (Press Release)
Posted on 06/11/07 15:57 by geno 888                             
Samsung reveals high-performance 64GByte SATA II SSDs (Press Release)
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. has become the first in the industry to sample 1.8-inch and 2.5-inch 64Gigabyte (GB) solid state drives (SSD) with a super-fast SATA (Serial ATA) II/native SATA interface. With a sequential write speed of 100Megabyte per second (MBps) and sequential read speed of 120MBps, the SATA II SSD is poised to expand the market for solid state drives from notebook PCs to corporate servers and other high-performance storage applications.

“The 64GB SATA II SSD is based on Samsung’s cutting-edge NAND technology with dramatically improved performance specs that are taking system performance to a whole new level of efficiency,” said Jim Elliott, director, NAND flash marketing, Samsung Semiconductor, Inc.

Samsung’s SATA II SSD combines a 50 nm-class, single-level-cell (SLC) 8Gb flash chip with a Samsung proprietary, high-speed SATA controller and supporting software.

The new SATA II SSD has a 3.0 gigabit-per-second (Gbps) interface speed which is twice as fast as its SATA I predecessor. Moreover, the SATA II SSD requires only half as much power as the 1.9 watts consumed by hard drives now used in notebook PCs and only one-tenth the power consumed by enterprise-class 15,000rpm hard drives in servers.

Market research firm Web-Feet Research estimates that the NAND flash–based SSD market is expected to show 74 percent compounded annual growth from 2007 through 2012 to reach US$10billion in 2012.

Samsung remains the leader in the production of higher-density solid state drives, developing a 32GB PATA SSD in March 2006, followed by a 64GB version using the SATA I interface in March of this year. The market has been moving rapidly toward SATA, which operates faster than its PATA counterpart, with competition intensifying over the development of new SATA-interface devices.

Press Release source: BusinessWire.
Reactions
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By Bekali (guest), Tue 6 Nov 2007 19:05
Too bad that the price & release date are unknown. Frown
By Qwerty (guest), Wed 7 Nov 2007 09:43
Anything SS is bound to be expensive for awhile.
By BitRate, Thu 8 Nov 2007 23:46
And the sequential data transfer rate is what ?? slower than a regular IDE hard drive I bet. They conveniently omit this important factor.
By TW (guest), Sat 10 Nov 2007 12:51
Quote @ "BitRate: "And the sequential data transfer rate is what ?? slower than a regular IDE hard drive I bet. They conveniently omit this important factor. " It is funny how you can filter information cry With a sequential write speed of 100Megabyte per second (MBps) and sequential read speed of 120MBps Read and read again.... If you know of an IDE drive that has seq 120MBps then please let us know !

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