Wednesday, March 13th 2013
Toshiba Announces Availability of 19 nm NAND SSDs
Toshiba Electronics Europe (TEE) has announced that solid state drives (SSDs) built on the company's 19nm Multi-Level Cell (MLC) NAND flash technology are now readily available across Europe. Toshiba was the first company to develop 19nm NAND SSDs and the family includes the world's smallest and highest density NAND flash drives.
Toshiba's THNSNH family addresses the storage, performance and power efficiency demands of even the most data-intensive and energy-sensitive systems. The drives are ideal for high-end notebooks, tablets, PCs, all-in-one desktop computers and industrial PCs. Capacities of 512GB1, 256GB, 128GB and 60GB are all now available in 2.5-inch form factors with a choice of 7.0 mm and 9.5 mm profiles. mSATA modules with capacities of 256GB, 128GB and 60GB are also available.Toshiba's innovation with the THNSNH series includes data protection through use of Quadruple Swing-By Code (QSBC), Toshiba's robust and highly efficient error correction code technology.
Toshiba's THNSNH family addresses the storage, performance and power efficiency demands of even the most data-intensive and energy-sensitive systems. The drives are ideal for high-end notebooks, tablets, PCs, all-in-one desktop computers and industrial PCs. Capacities of 512GB1, 256GB, 128GB and 60GB are all now available in 2.5-inch form factors with a choice of 7.0 mm and 9.5 mm profiles. mSATA modules with capacities of 256GB, 128GB and 60GB are also available.Toshiba's innovation with the THNSNH series includes data protection through use of Quadruple Swing-By Code (QSBC), Toshiba's robust and highly efficient error correction code technology.
13 Comments on Toshiba Announces Availability of 19 nm NAND SSDs
Getting Closer to Perfection
Until then, all the SSD's are some half ass middle thing thats not really the real deal. Plus with smaller manufacturing processes, they will get even less reliable.
Because when a single vendor will make a SSD technology that can clear individual bits and won't even need idiotic TRIM, then i'll be the first one to praise that company or tech. But until then they are all the same.
The part i was always puzzled by was the fact that SSD's did not have trim in the 1st place as they are nothing new.
SSD does slow down but it's not prone to mechanical wearing, it's not sensitive to shock (laptops), lower power usage and it's much faster.
And who's to say that today's SSD won't be working in 10 years time?
The HDD/SSD comparison is almost the same as CRT/LCD comparison so by that definition everyone should still be using CRT displays?
And my 2 intel SSD"s are still going strong which i believe are at there 3 year mark now and still doing the same speeds as day one.. All 3 of my SSD's are working like day one and in spec.
Anyways point is you can have bad luck with any thing were some have more failing WD than SG.Anyways when you get another Good Luck! ;)