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View Full Version : Western Digital Introduces Solid State Drives (Finally!)


EnJoY
06-16-2009, 05:18 PM
Western Digital today launched its SiliconDrive III solid state drive storage products, with technology (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Introduces+Solid+State+Drives/article15436.htm#) based from its acquisition of SiliconSystems in March (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Buys+SiliconSystems+Enters+SSD+Mar ket/article14712.htm).

WD will release 2.5-inch SATA and PATA and a 1.8" Micro SATA that have read speeds up to 100MB/s and write speeds up to 80MB/s, with storage capacities up to 120GB.

The SSDs are being targeted for the enterprise market, though it's likely WD will release SSDs designed more for home PC (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Introduces+Solid+State+Drives/article15436.htm#) users. Pricing and availability remain unknown for the SiliconDrive III line.

"SiliconDrive III is the first example of how WD plans to productize solid state technology (http://www.wdc.com/en/company/releases/PressRelease.asp?release=8c1da32e-fb00-46c1-b11e-ac9793c3b435) developed by SiliconSystems," WD SSD business unit (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Introduces+Solid+State+Drives/article15436.htm#) vice president Michael Hajeck said in a statement. "The launch of SiliconDrive III will also enable WD to leverage its global sales and distribution channels to accelerate the adoption of SSD technology beyond SiliconSystems' traditional embedded systems (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Introduces+Solid+State+Drives/article15436.htm#) OEM customer base into data streaming applications such as multimedia content delivery systems and data center media appliances."

SSDs remain more expensive than traditional hard disk drives, but are growing in popularity as the storage capacity (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Introduces+Solid+State+Drives/article15436.htm#) and price per gigabyte continues to drop. The lack of moving parts means they are more stable and also run cooler than regular HDDs, which make them ideal in the data center (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Introduces+Solid+State+Drives/article15436.htm#).


Source: Daily Tech (http://www.dailytech.com/Western+Digital+Introduces+Solid+State+Drives/article15436.htm)

Jay
06-27-2009, 02:20 AM
give me some raptor ssds :rofl:

Neuromancer
06-27-2009, 10:42 AM
ugh,, with read write speeds worse than the worst SSDs out there now :(

Thought they would start out gunning for top dog.

randomizer
06-27-2009, 11:59 PM
It's great to have amazing performance like the X25-M but if you can't sell it at a reasonable price then it doesn't matter how great it is, only a few will buy it. I'd take cheap over high performance any day, hence why I still buy HDDs.

largon
06-29-2009, 02:07 AM
I feel sorry for people who say SSDs aren't reasonably priced when comparing their capacity to HDDs. These people are missing the whole point of SSDs. The thing is, solid state discs make a huge difference for user experience by virtually eliminating the lag that HDDs cause when you're doing anything. The lag that one is used to and that one expects is all gone when you go SSD. And ofcourse, the nasty clickety-click is gone too.

Proper 60GB drives aren't terribly expensive, yet, the impact to system responsiveness is huge.
It's not about the MB/s numbers or capacity.
It's all about the fluidity.