Software

Super Talent Shows Its Super Fast PCIe SSD.

Super Talent had its RAIDdrive GS card on display and on demo at the show floor here at Computex. The PCIe card allows users to experience performance beyond the 3 Gb/s limitation of the current SATA spec. Despite 6 Gb/s SATA coming soon, the PCIe interconnect still provides superior bandwidth. The current generation of Super Talent"s RAIDdrive GS actually uses four Indilinx SSD controllers on one card and supports up to 2 TB of in a MLC configuration or 1 TB in a SLC configuration. Keep in mind that you get more capacity with MLC drives but you take a performance hit. SLC SSD drives also cost a lot more to produce. Current sequential read and write performance on the RAIDdrive GS? 1.5 GB/sec. and 1.3 GB/sec. respectively--that"s gigabytes per second. Super Talent indicated to us that its future RAIDdrive will support eight Indilinx SSD controllers for even more RAID and throughput performance. Stacking multiple controllers together also allows Super Talent to deliver RAIDdrive GS" with higher capacities. We were told that the eight-controller version of the RAIDdrive will cost less than $1,000 when it ships.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Oculis Labs Honored with Maryland Incubator Company of the Year Award
Oculis LabsTM, a leading innovator in data-in-use security, today announced that it has been awarded the annual Maryland Incubator Company of the Year Award.
Popular Articles

Brightside intros 200,000:1 contrast ratio display.
San Francisco (CA)

Intel And Nvidia Co-sponsors In Parallel Programming Initiative.
Palo Alto (CA) -Stanford is the next University that receives support from major IT companies to develop new techniques, tools, and training materials to exploit the parallelism capabilities of multi-core processors. And no, that headline is no mistake: The initial group of sponsors includes a colorful mix of rivals and partners: AMD, Nvidia, Sun Microsystems as well as Intel, Hewlett-Packard and IBM, showing first signs that these companies could actually be working together to solve the multi-core programming dilemma. Too good to be true?