Thursday, August 12th 2010

Micron Introduces New RealSSD P300 Solid-State Drives for the Enterprise

Micron Technology, Inc., today introduced the RealSSD P300 solid-state drive (SSD), bringing faster system performance and improved data integrity to enterprise environments. The RealSSD P300 drive features the SATA 6-gigabits per second (Gbps) interface, a first for the enterprise SSD market. The new P300 SSD delivers extraordinarily high steady-state input/output operations per second (IOPS), up to 44,000 reads and 16,000 writes--more than 15 times the write performance of competing SATA-based SSDs.

"The RealSSD P300 SSD is the fastest SATA-based drive on the market," said Dean Klein, Micron vice president of Memory System Development. "The RealSSD P300 is able to do the work of multiple hard drives--outperforming a RAID of 12 hard drives in some cases."
The ever-expanding workload of today's enterprise environments requires the technology within to be able to withstand the rigors of data being constantly accessed, transferred and stored. The RealSSD P300 drive was designed specifically to address these requirements by using Micron's high-performance and high-endurance ONFI 2.1 34-nanometer (nm) single-level cell (SLC) NAND technology, ensuring product longevity and added reliability in today's demanding enterprise environments. Combining Micron's high-quality NAND and proprietary firmware design enables the P300 SSD to deliver the highest SATA drive endurance capability in the industry--3.5 petabytes total bytes written for the 200GB drive which is equal to writing approximately 1.9 terabytes per day, every day for five years.

"Aside from its raw performance, the RealSSD P300 product was also designed to reach industry leading steady-state capabilities, even with the write cache disabled. With the P300, users no longer have to choose between IOPs or throughput and maximum data resiliency--they can have both in the same drive," added Klein.

Micron worked with Calypso Systems, Inc., a leading industry benchmarking firm to test the P300 SSD. "The RealSSD P300 SSD once again shows Micron seizing an industry leading position, delivering tremendous performance gains relative to the competition," said Eden Kim, chief executive officer of Calypso Systems. "By taking advantage of the SATA 6Gb/s, the P300 showed impressive small block 4K Random Write IOPs that were as much as 2.5 to 16 times faster than competing drives it was tested against."

Available in 50, 100 and 200-gigabyte (GB) capacities, the RealSSD P300 drive is targeted primarily at enterprise applications including blade and conventional servers, storage arrays and high-end workstations. Designed to fit the standard 2.5-inch form factor, the P300 SSD achieves a read throughput speed of up to 360 MB/s and a write throughput speed of up to 275 MB/s. To learn more about the product features of the P300 SSD, visit this page.

Availability
Micron is sampling the RealSSD P300 SSD with customers now and plans to enter mass production in October.
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7 Comments on Micron Introduces New RealSSD P300 Solid-State Drives for the Enterprise

#1
mechtech
Hmm SLC nice, I wonder what controller it uses.

Have to wait for some reviews I guess.
Posted on Reply
#2
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
SLC and enterprise means its too expensive for any of us, but sounds like an awesome drive to stick in a high performance server.
Posted on Reply
#3
Master Wolfe
Micron Introduces New RealSSD P300 Solid-State Drives for the Enterprise
Which version of theEnterprise is it for? :D Sorry, this old geek couldn't resist.
Posted on Reply
#4
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
master wolfewhich version of theenterprise is it for? :d sorry, this old geek couldn't resist.
ncc-1701-ssd
Posted on Reply
#5
WarEagleAU
Bird of Prey
Wow probably in the thousands for costs, but that name is eerily close to Corsairs RealSSD
Posted on Reply
#6
EaGle1337
WarEagleAUWow probably in the thousands for costs, but that name is eerily close to Corsairs RealSSD
you mean crucial's realSSD right?
Posted on Reply
#7
FNoob
Musselsncc-1701-ssd
The Capt. after Piccard blew up a crapload o ships apparently.
Posted on Reply
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