Fusion-io ioXtreme SSD Speeds Thru Bandwidth and Your Savings Account

by Josh on November 18, 2009 · Comments

Out of the millions of things in the world to get really, really embarrassingly excited about, storage read/write speeds are UP there. Are ya with me? YEEEEEEAH.

Start giving your bandwith brothers high-fives, because Fusion-io knows what you want and the latest ioXtreme SSD is setting the standard, at least for the next week, for solid-state memory speeds. Not only are they gonna make your CPU smoke, they’ll also put a good-size hole in the old wallet box.

How Fast is Fast?

Here’s an idea of what Fusion-io’s ioXtreme is capable of and what SSD’s are changing in general

  • Average bandwidth of 520 MB/s
  • Throughput of 700 MB/s
  • 80GB of high performance, non-volatile NAND Flash storage
  • Copy, edit, save massive files 5x faster

700 MB/s is nothing to balk at. mechanical hard-drives are pluggin’ away at around 131 MB/s.

The Product Development Angle

There are disadvantage and advantages to SSD storage of course. In the area of SSD for CAD and other product development related tasks, we commonly work with large data sets, which means large fragmentation on regular hard-drives. Those large models also tend to load really slow. These are both areas SSD is going to benefit CAD users.

On the downside, you have the price of SSD’s. The ioXtreme is rolling in at $895 for 80GB. Yep, $11 per giggy. Not the cheapest. Along with price, comes the size limit. That’s changing with SSD’s hitting 1TB, but then we get the price slap again. Fortunately, storage price historically plummet as the new tech gets picked up by Computer manufacturers. If you’re a CAD user, that can’t happen soon enough.

So, basically, SSD’s are the near future of storage because they have fast access times and rock the read speeds. To get more info on SSD, you can turn to the always, mostly accurate Wikipedia and really get into it at AnandTech.

HotHardware via Engadget

(No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...
Comments
  • Jon
    That is some impressive numbers... I can't wait till they become more affordable like regular HDs :-)

    Jon @ WoodMarvels.com
  • I'm bettin' a couple years out these will be a lot cheaper, and we'll probably have their capabilities in everything from netbooks to mobiles.
  • Sonicson
    True but in a couple of years there will be something new and better than this.
  • aww, you're ruinin' the fun ;) Commercial-pricepoint-availability speaking, they'll probably just be peaking on the SSD tech in a couple years, but yeah, quantum computing... look out.
  • Ripper
    yea dats very nice was having a look at it and to be fair unless u are running a server or doing mapping or something dont waste ur money but i still want it ;)
blog comments powered by Disqus