Samsung says SSDs will last, stop worrying |
Samsung is trying to dispel some concerns consumers are having about using flash-based solid-state drives in their computers, saying they are more reliable that a lot of people think. Sure, having a 64GB SSD in your notebook at first sounds like a pretty good idea. Faster boot times, no moving parts to wear out, but then the price hits you. Adding that SSD can increase the overall price of the computer by as much as $900. Also, in terms of computing, a maximum 100,000 write cycles just doesn’t seem like that much.
Michael Yang, flash marketing manager at Samsung, is assuring us that 100,000 write cycles is actually quite a bit. He states that the SSD can write 100,000 times to each and every memory cell, and the drive controller evens out the cells that get written to with “wear leveling”. As an example, Yang says that a 64GB SSD could be fully erased and filled again with data every hour and it would still last years before failing. He also said the failure would then likely come from the controller, not the memory cells. He also expects the price of SSDs to drop around 40 percent each year, making this alternative more affordable.
Yang also spoke of some industry leaders who are putting their trust in the solid state drives such as America Express and Citibank. The drives might cost more but the difference in I/O operations per second (150 for HDDs, 30,000 for SSDs) make it worth it. So Samsung, now you’ve made us feel a little bit better about this, when will we see some bigger SSDs?
TAGS: flash, Samsung, solid state drives, SSD ![]() |
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