Intel's X25-M SSD

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If like me you've been reading all the flash SSD drive reviews that come out, you might have also noticed that the performance on write-heavy workloads hasn't been too far ahead of traditional drives. It's typically been hit or miss as to whether the SDD would really be all that much faster on a real OLTP-ish database workload, compared to a good 10k or 15k drive (WD's Velociraptor is the usual comparison drive).

That's over as of today:  http://techreport.com/articles.x/15433/9

You can see what I was talking about above in their Database graph: under heavy load, the Velociraptor pulls ahead of even a good performing flash product (Samsung's FlashSSD), and the latency curve on the next page shows something similar. But the Intel drive is obviously a whole different class of SSD implementation altogether. It's not clear yet if that's because of their NCQ support, or maybe the firmware just buffers writes better (they should have tested with NCQ disabled to nail that down).

With entry-level 64GB Flash drives now available for just under $200 ( http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820227344 , price is so low because they're closing that model out for a better V2 product) this space is really getting interesting.

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* Greg Smith gsmith@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.gregsmith.com Baltimore, MD


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