Kingston Releases Second-Gen Solid-State Drive

KingstonSSDBundle.jpg

Your dream of having a reliable solid-state drive in your computer comes a little closer with today’s announcement from Kingston Digital, but you’d better have some room on your credit card. Kingston announced the second-generation of its SSDNow V+ solid-state drive, with sizes up to 512GB. The company advertises that it delivers faster performance than the previous generation.

The drive now includes Windows 7 TRIM support, which helps it maintain optimal write speed throughout its lifespan. It also demonstrated considerable speed improvements using the PCMark Vantage 1.0.1 benchmark test for Windows 7. The 512GB drive earned a score of 28,264, while a 7200RPM hard-disk drive earned only 3,294. PCMark Vantage runs a series of tests such as operating system startup, importing photos, and adding music.

All this performance will cost you, however, as there’s still a hefty solid-state premium. The 512GB drive alone lists for $1,969, and that drive with an easy-upgrade bundle (with mounting brackets and cloning software) lists for $1,985.

Super Talent adds SandForce controller to new TeraDrive SSDs

All we ever hear of that SandForce SF-1500 controller seems to be about how wickedly fast it is, so we’d be remiss not to inform you that it’s found another home — this time inside Super Talent‘s new enterprise-class SSD line. Branded as TeraDrive FT2, these drives will range from 50GB to 400GB on MLC NAND flash, or up to 200GB on the even nicer SLC-based stuff. The only hurdle in all this glory is that the hardware seems destined primarily for non-consumer markets, with OEMs getting samples now and expecting volume deliveries by the end of this quarter. Then again, if you really can’t wait for these to filter through in consumer machines, we’re sure OCZ and RunCore will be more than happy to sell you some of their own silly fast SandForce-infused gear.

Super Talent adds SandForce controller to new TeraDrive SSDs originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jan 2010 13:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IBM and Fujifilm develop 35TB magnetic tape cartridges, unveil it in black and white

SSDs may be what’s “next,” but seriously — magnetic tape storage is the real heat. This darn near antediluvian storage medium is amazingly still around and kicking, and what’s even more incredible is that real advancements are taking place. Just under four years ago, IBM and Fujifilm were doing the Cha Cha Slide Tango as they introduced 8TB cartridges; today, the two are rolling out (quite literally, actually) a 35TB version into the wild, wild world that we call home. Nah, you won’t find these on any Best Buy shelves, but your great grandchild’s medical records may one day end up on something built in the year 2010. Just think about that. Think about it.

Continue reading IBM and Fujifilm develop 35TB magnetic tape cartridges, unveil it in black and white

IBM and Fujifilm develop 35TB magnetic tape cartridges, unveil it in black and white originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jan 2010 02:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Giz Explains: SSDs and Why You Wish You Had One

Speed. Toughness. Efficiency. Silence. That’s why we want solid-state drives in our computers. But we worry about the zoom-zoom performance degrading over time, and the fact that SSDs might eventually wear out. Here’s what you need to know about ’em.

Why Solid-State Drives Are Awesome (Or At Least, Better Than Hard Drives)

To understand what’s great about SSDs, let’s start with HDDs (you know, old-fashioned hard drives). On a basic level, a hard disk drive works thusly: Inside is a magnetized recording surface called a platter that spins around really fast, with a head that zooms across disk to read and write data—think kinda like a record player, except the head never touches the surface, ’cause that would be very, very bad. So, you can see the problem with hard drives: They’re fragile (don’t drop your computer) and they’re slow to access stuff because the head has to physically move to where the data is.


With an SSD, on the other hand, we’re talking straight silicon. What’s inside is a bunch of flash memory chips and a controller running the show. There are no moving parts, so an SSD doesn’t need to start spinning, doesn’t need to physically hunt data scattered across the drive and doesn’t make a whirrrrr. The result is that it’s crazy faster than a regular hard drive in nearly every way, so you have insanely quick boot times (an old video, but it stands), application launches, random writes and almost every other measure of drive performance (writing large files excepted). For a frame of reference, General Manager of SanDisk’s SSD group, Doron Myersdorf, says an equivalent hard drive would have to spin at almost 40,000rpm to match an SSD. And, you can drop it—at least, a little.

Secrets of the SSD

Typically, what you’ve inside an SSD is a bunch of NAND flash memory chips for storage—the same stuff found in memory cards and USB thumb drives—along with a small cache of DRAM, like you’d find on most current hard drives. The DRAM is also flash memory, but the difference between the two is that the storage memory is non-volatile, meaning the data it holds won’t go poof when it loses power, while the faster DRAM is volatile memory, so “poof” is exactly what happens to DRAM data when the power goes out. That’s fine because it’s the faster DRAM is just for caching things, holding them temporarily to make the whole system work faster.

So, let’s talk a bit about flash memory itself. I’ll try to keep it straightforward and not lose you, because it’s key to the benefits and problems with solid-state storage.

Flash memory is made up of a bunch of memory cells, which are made up of transistors. There are two basic kinds of memory: With single-level cell (SLC) memory, one bit of data is stored per cell. (Bits, the basic building block of information, if you recall, have two states, 0 or 1.) The SLC type is fast as hell and lasts a long time, but it is too expensive for storing the dense amounts of data you’d want in a personal computer. SLC memory is really only used for enterprise stuff, like servers, where you need it to last for 100,000 write cycles.

The solution for normal humans is multi-level cell memory. Currently, up to 4 bits can be stored per cell. “Multi-level” refers to the multiple levels of voltage in the cell used to get those extra bits in. MLC SSD drives are much cheaper than SLC but are, as I mentioned, slower, and can wear out faster than their pricier counterpart. Still, for now and going forward into the foreseeable future, all of the SSDs you could come close to owning are of the MLC variety.

The Bad Stuff

Structurally, flash memory is divided into blocks, which are broken down further into pages. And now, we get into one of the major problems with flash. While data can be read and written at the individual page level, it can only be erased at the larger block level. In other words, suppose you have a 256k block and a 4k page, and you want to erase just one page worth of data, you have to erase the whole block, and then write all the rest of the data back to the block.

This is a huge problem, for one, because MLC flash memory wears out after 10,000 write cycles. Two, as the drive fills up, performance significantly degrades. (Anandtech has a pretty great illustration, amidst a massively deep dive on SSDs you should read if you’re interested at all, showing this.) That’s because without free blocks to write to, you’ve gotta go through that intensive erase and rewrite cycle, which, as you’d imagine, entails a lot of overhead. Problem numero three is that, according to SanDisk CEO Eli Harari, there’s “a brick wall” in the near future, when storage at the chip level could stop increasing in the not-too-distant future.

Mitigating the Bad Stuff

The thing is, you actually probably still want an SSD in your next computer, to make it run awesomer. Because where there are problems, there are sorta solutions. Remember how I mentioned up above the other major component in an SSD, besides the flash memory, is the controller? They’re a big part of what differentiates one company’s SSD from another’s. The controller is the secret sauce, as SanDisk’s Myersdorf told me. Because the game, for now, is all about managing flash better, both physically and logically. In other words, it’s about algorithms.

The first standard technique for long flash-memory life is wear leveling, which is simply not writing to the same area of the drive over and over again. Instead, the goal is to fill up the entire drive with stuff before you have to start erasing blocks, knowing that erasing and re-writing will use up precious cycles. The problem of “Write amplification”—say you have a 1MB document that ends up causing 4MB worth of writes to the drive because of the whole block and pages problem described above, where you wind up reading, erasing and re-writing a bunch of extra blocks and pages—that is being lowered, says Myersdorf, because drive management is shifting from being block-based to page-based. More granular algorithms with caching and prediction means there’s less unnecessary erasing and writing.

The biggest thing is what’s called TRIM. As you probably know, when you delete something from your computer, it isn’t instantly vaporized. Your OS basically just marks the data as “Hey it’s cool to pave over this with new stuff.” Your hard drive has no real idea you deleted anything. With the TRIM function, when you delete something, the OS actually tells the SSD, “Hey you can scrub this crap.” The SSD dumps the block to a cache, wipes the pages with the stuff you want gone, and copies the stuff you want to keep back to a new block, leaving you with clean pages for the next time you want to write something to the disk. This means better performance when you’re saving new stuff, since it handles the read-erase-rewrite dance ahead of time. Windows 7 supports TRIM, and Myersdorf says Windows 8 will be even better for solid-state storage.

As for busting through the brick wall of limited storage, the number of electrons that can reside in a cell, increasing flash memory storage at a pace faster than Moore’s Law, right now, Toshiba, who invented NAND flash, is currently the chip capacity king. The company just announced a new 64GB NAND flash module that combines 16 4GB NAND chips. This would seem to be closing in on that wall, which we don’t want them to do, because we want the dollar-to-MB ratio to keep dropping. Myersdorf is optimistic (despite his boss’s gloomy pronouncement), “There have been several walls in history of the [flash] industry—there was transition to MLC, then three bits per cell, then four—every time there is some physical wall, that physics doesn’t allow you to pass, there is always a new shift of paradigm as to how we make the next step on the performance curve.”

Okay, the big question then: When are SSDs gonna get seriously affordable? A 160GB version of one of the one of the most acclaimed SSDs, Intel’s X25, retails for $470. OCZ’s Colossus is a verifiable brick of solid-state storage, and the 1TB model has an MSRP of $2200, though it’s going for much more. By contrast, a 1TB WD old-fashioned hard drive is like a hundred bucks on a bad day. Myersdorf says it’s hard to say when the SSD’s dollar-to-byte ratio is going to go down absolutely, mostly because of supply and demand, but he did predict that a lot of “mainstream” laptops are gonna have 256GB SSDs in the next 18 months. Oh good, I’ll be due for a new laptop right around then.

Thanks to SanDisk for helping us out! Still something you wanna know? Send questions about solid states, solid snakes, or solid shakes here, with “Giz Explains” in the subject line.

Apple rumor roundup: pipe dreams, Lala’s role and Verizon’s iPhone 4G

In case you haven’t noticed, things are getting out of hand in the world of Apple rumors. Frankly, it’s all we can do to read another one and trudge onward, but hey — we’ve no problem with folks putting their reputations on the line here. Let’s dig in to the latest pair, shall we?

The rumor: Apple’s acquisition of Lala will actually lead to customers having access to an “online locker” for multimedia. This could be a cloud storage location for one’s iTunes library, enabling them to have access to their jams and vids even when away from their at-home storage. The trick is that the cloud would only hold the metadata, and streaming would originate from somewhere else on Apple’s end.
Our take: Okay, so we want to believe. Just imagine if your next Apple tablet or iPhone knew exactly what songs you owned in iTunes, and at a moment’s notice, you could tap into the iTunes store and stream full, unedited versions of those songs from anywhere. Amazing, no? Problem is, the bulk of iTunes libraries aren’t made up of content that was purchased in iTunes (or purchased at all). It seems that the best Apple could do would be to negotiate streaming deals for content you’ve actually purchased within iTunes, which results in a half-baked user experience. Last we checked, Stevie J wasn’t much on half-baked user experiences.

The rumor: Astoundingly, the mythical Apple tablet won’t be the company’s “one more thing” next week; instead, it’ll be a refreshed iPhone… that works on Verizon Wireless. Oh, and iPhone OS 4.0. So says Canaccord Adams analyst Peter Misek, anyway.
Our take: Ha! Apple has never been one to showcase too much at one time, and we’re guessing that the outfit would be smart enough to withhold a new iPhone introduction for a separate press event. We don’t doubt that a Verizon iPhone is in the works (though an LTE version will be at least a year or two out), but there’s no way Jobs steals the tablet’s thunder by giving every rabid iPhone user hot sweats when considering the switch to Big Red. Bottom line? Don’t bank on it.

At this point, we reckon everyone would be best served by taking a huge step back, a deep breath and one of those so-called “chill pills.” Next Wednesday ain’t so far away, now is it?

Apple rumor roundup: pipe dreams, Lala’s role and Verizon’s iPhone 4G originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Jan 2010 10:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lenovo RapidDrive brings SSD and HDD together, demoes 66 percent speed boost on video

You know, making that jump from HDD to SSD still costs an arm and a leg, so how about somewhere in between that gap? That’s what Lenovo‘s offering as an option for the IdeaPad Y460 and Y560 coming in March. The idea with this RapidDrive technology is that you can have a 32GB or 64GB PCI-Express SSD installed alongside your regular HDD (up to 500GB option), and the two drives will effectively be combined into one. Sounds like a tribute to the hybrid hard drives that seem to have quietly disappeared. The guys at Lenovo Blogs claim that “this is not Intel TurboMemory” as RapidDrive implements a “more automatic” algorithm to dynamically pool and manage the hybrid drive, thus giving up to 66 percent increase in Windows 7 boot speed as well as everyday performance. Regardless of this jab at Intel, we’ve seen this demoed at CES and it looked as good as the video demo after the break. Just don’t let us down with the SSD prices, Lenovo.

Continue reading Lenovo RapidDrive brings SSD and HDD together, demoes 66 percent speed boost on video

Lenovo RapidDrive brings SSD and HDD together, demoes 66 percent speed boost on video originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jan 2010 18:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony releases TransferJet wireless Memory Stick in Japan, taking pre-orders in the US

Oh Sony, you just like to tease us, don’t you? Two weeks after a brief mention at CES, Japan’s been given the introductory taste of this tech giant’s first ever TransferJet wireless Memory Stick. Meanwhile, Sony Style US has quietly added the same card for pre-order at $99.99 and cites February 8th as the possible launch date — a slight delay from Sony’s promised January launch. If the party’s big enough, this TransferJet close-proximity radio technology could signal the death of cables and bulky card readers, but you’ll still need compatible devices to work that magic on this memory stick. Sony will sure need more than just a few cameras to get us to make-dot-believe in this new ecosystem.

Sony releases TransferJet wireless Memory Stick in Japan, taking pre-orders in the US originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jan 2010 04:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Airstash: A Teeny-Tiny Wi-Fi Router and Card Reader

laptopBy day, the Airstash is a common, ordinary USB card reader. But by night, it dons the mantle of wireless connectivity, taking to the streets and sharing pictures an images in an ad-hoc, daredevil manner.

The Airstash looks much like a regular card reader, with a USB plug on one end and an SD card-shaped hole in the other. In between you can find a tiny, battery powered 802.11 b/g Wi-Fi router. Slot in a card and it can be reached wirelessly through the web browser of any Wi-Fi enabled computer or phone.

The design is simple, but the uses are manifold. You could use this to wirelessly copy photos from card to computer, but that, apart from saving you a USB port, is a little boring. What about carrying an extra 32GB of movies and music that can be streamed from the built-in server direct to your iPhone? Or creating a fully functional wireless network for sharing, well, anything? Because it uses vanilla Wi-Fi, it works with anything. And because it uses USB, it charges when you plug it into a spare port.

The product was shown last week at CES, and right now has neither a price or a shipping date (”available soon” is the only hint on the product page). If it is cheap, and if the battery in such a tiny case can last long enough to be useful, then this could be a very useful toy. And if it is given away at next
year’s CES in the same fashion as pen drives were at this year’s show, we’ll be very happy indeed.

Airstash product page [Airstash via Oh Gizmo!]


Samsung Announces 32GB microSD cards

Samsung_32GB_microSD.jpgSamsung Electronics has unveiled a 32GB high-density microSD card for use in cell phones and other devices with the appropriate card slot.

The card is based on the company’s 30 nanometer, 32-gigabit (Gb) NAND flash memory. Inside, it stacks eight 32Gb NAND components together along with a card controller for a total storage of 32GB. The new card is just 1mm thick, and the portion of the card that inserts into a handset is just 0.7mm high.

Mass production of the card will begin next month. No word on a price yet, but I doubt it will be cheap out of the gate. Many of the latest cell phones we’ve reviewed, but not all, advertise compatibility with 32GB microSD cards; check yours to make sure before ordering one.

Intel’s 40GB SSD quietly starts shipping

Smaller sized / smaller priced SSD boot drives are a pretty attractive proposition for someone wanting to boost performance on a budget. Kingston’s 40GB SSDnow, for instance, was particularly well received at Engadget HQ recently, and now Intel’s on the scene with its new X25-V Value line. With a 35MB/s write speed (as reported by Listed First) and a 65 / 110 microsecond read / write latency this isn’t the fastest solid state drive out there — in fact, at $130 (New Egg) it’s a couple bucks more expensive than Kingston’s faster alternative. But who knows? Maybe they’ll slash prices, or one will fall off a truck in front of you. Stranger things have happened.

Intel’s 40GB SSD quietly starts shipping originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 13:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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