Thursday, April 16th 2009
I-O Data Readying ExpressCard SSDs
Solid State Disks (SSDs) come are coming in all shapes, sizes, and interfaces. I-O Data is preparing a new SSD design that is compatible with the ExpressCard 34 slot that most notebooks feature. The purpose of this design could be portability, or simply expanding the notebook's storage beyond what its hard drive allows. The ExpressCard interface provides fast connectivity between the system and the SSD's own storage controller (up to 2.5 Gbps in PCI-Express mode).
The drive measures 34x74x5 mm, and weighs around 21 g. It comes in two variants, based on the storage they offer: 32 GB and 64 GB. Backed by a one-year warranty, the 32 GB variant is priced in Japan at US $170, and the 64 GB at $243.
Source:
TechConnect Magazine
The drive measures 34x74x5 mm, and weighs around 21 g. It comes in two variants, based on the storage they offer: 32 GB and 64 GB. Backed by a one-year warranty, the 32 GB variant is priced in Japan at US $170, and the 64 GB at $243.
10 Comments on I-O Data Readying ExpressCard SSDs
looks bada$$ to me.
BUT, this means that you must have the ExpressCard in your laptop to make it run that installation of Windows. Cuz people don't want to lug an external hard drive around with their laptop.
With the ExpressCard SSD, you can leave it in the ExpressCard slot indefinitely.
Won't have to unplug and replug it everytime you want to use it, or put it away into a laptop sleeve/bag.
The question here, is what interface does it use, the story doesn't clearly state it.
All ExpressCard devices either use USB or PCI-E communication.
The USB ExpressCard SSDs are all capped around 35 MB/sec reads and writes.
The PCI-E ExpressCard SSD can do 115 MB/sec read and 65 MB/sec write.
The only PCI-E ExpressCard SSD on the market is the Filemate SolidGO products:
www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820161324
www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820161325
So, depending on the speed specs (which aren't listed anywhere), this is probably just another USB ExpressCard.