Saturday, January 3rd 2015
Western Digital to Demonstrate 4 TB Hybrid Drive at Storage Visions 2015
WD, a Western Digital company and world leader in storage solutions, will demonstrate the world's fastest 4 TB hybrid drive at the SATA-IO booth (#205) at Storage Visions 2015, January 4 to 5 in Las Vegas, NV. WD's prototype drive utilizes the SATA Express PCI-e interface, 4 TB 3.5-inch hybrid hard drive, and up to 128 GB solid state drive to deliver compelling performance and GB-per-dollar solutions for desktop and gaming applications.
The two WD SATA Express interface demonstrations at Storage Visions 2015 will include commercially available motherboards from WD partners ASRock and Gigabyte. These systems will demonstrate cabled SATA Express PCI-e interconnect flexibility and configuration options for single-volume caching and RAID.Heavy desktop usage scenarios will benefit from larger cache sizes (64 GB will be demonstrated) by enabling retention of key hot data across multiple applications, which improves overall performance. In WD's labs, WD's SATA Express 4 TB drive with 64 GB cache achieved a PCMark8 benchmark score of 4459, demonstrating near-SSD performance at an optimized GB-per-dollar value.
"WD is committed to working with the industry to push the boundaries of what you might expect from a traditional hard drive," said Matt Rutledge, senior vice president, Storage Technology, WD. "By moving to PCI Express, the industry marries the world's most popular storage bus with the world's most popular computer bus. This union provides a solid growth path to innovate new capability, while preserving the ability to plug legacy SATA drives into new SATA Express based computers."
"WD's culture is one of strong collaboration with industry partners in a rapidly changing environment," said Gary Meister, senior vice president of engineering, WD. "We see the industry moving toward simplification of the overall PC subsystem to a single storage bus based around the PCIe protocol. In this demo, we placed a hard drive, flash NAND and SATAe technology into one package, freeing up one slot in the system and simplifying how our customers could create and maintain such an advanced storage solution. When our customers ask us to move to the next storage bus, we will have done all the necessary work to be ready to support the move."
"ASRock is delighted to show speeds of almost 10 Gbit-per-second when RAID striped off of two WD prototype drives," said James Lee, vice president of ASRock sales and marketing of ASRock. "ASRock is on the forefront of creating new systems and architectures that break through classical bottlenecks."
"Gigabyte demonstration will show how a WD prototype SATAe drive enables world class gaming experience," said Jackson Hsu, product planning division manager of Gigabyte. "Included in our demonstration is work we have done with WD to make the combination of a hard disk drive and a flash subsystem look like a single volume to the end user. This allows the power of having separate devices in a system along with the convenience of having only a single drive to manage."
The two WD SATA Express interface demonstrations at Storage Visions 2015 will include commercially available motherboards from WD partners ASRock and Gigabyte. These systems will demonstrate cabled SATA Express PCI-e interconnect flexibility and configuration options for single-volume caching and RAID.Heavy desktop usage scenarios will benefit from larger cache sizes (64 GB will be demonstrated) by enabling retention of key hot data across multiple applications, which improves overall performance. In WD's labs, WD's SATA Express 4 TB drive with 64 GB cache achieved a PCMark8 benchmark score of 4459, demonstrating near-SSD performance at an optimized GB-per-dollar value.
"WD is committed to working with the industry to push the boundaries of what you might expect from a traditional hard drive," said Matt Rutledge, senior vice president, Storage Technology, WD. "By moving to PCI Express, the industry marries the world's most popular storage bus with the world's most popular computer bus. This union provides a solid growth path to innovate new capability, while preserving the ability to plug legacy SATA drives into new SATA Express based computers."
"WD's culture is one of strong collaboration with industry partners in a rapidly changing environment," said Gary Meister, senior vice president of engineering, WD. "We see the industry moving toward simplification of the overall PC subsystem to a single storage bus based around the PCIe protocol. In this demo, we placed a hard drive, flash NAND and SATAe technology into one package, freeing up one slot in the system and simplifying how our customers could create and maintain such an advanced storage solution. When our customers ask us to move to the next storage bus, we will have done all the necessary work to be ready to support the move."
"ASRock is delighted to show speeds of almost 10 Gbit-per-second when RAID striped off of two WD prototype drives," said James Lee, vice president of ASRock sales and marketing of ASRock. "ASRock is on the forefront of creating new systems and architectures that break through classical bottlenecks."
"Gigabyte demonstration will show how a WD prototype SATAe drive enables world class gaming experience," said Jackson Hsu, product planning division manager of Gigabyte. "Included in our demonstration is work we have done with WD to make the combination of a hard disk drive and a flash subsystem look like a single volume to the end user. This allows the power of having separate devices in a system along with the convenience of having only a single drive to manage."
7 Comments on Western Digital to Demonstrate 4 TB Hybrid Drive at Storage Visions 2015
"Lets strap a SSD on a Hard drive, call it revolutionary and try to PR the SHIT out of it!!!"
Or.... we could just hope MS one day moves to a better file system like the promised us with Vista that would do the same work for us, frequently accessed files moved to the higher speed drive, larger files where contiguous reads and writes are as fast or faster than the processor can handle anyway moved to the mechanical disk. Use meta data in conjunction with file storage with a smart file system......nah better scrap that project, lets make Windows 8!!!
Then WD comes around and brings you 4TB hybrid drive and you complain over it? WHY!? I have a home made 2TB + 32GB SSD software hybrid setup and it's fantastic. I have 2TB of storage at my fingertips with boot times and games/programs loading that nearly matches SSD drives for a fraction of the price i'd pay for 4TB SSD. How is this a bad thing!? And seeing how just 32GB cache makes a massive difference, I might just as well make a middle step purchase and get myself whis drive instead of waiting for native 2TB SSD's. Because once you want a big storage with SSD speeds, and you actually taste such setup once yourself, it's hard not to like it.
I just don't understand why they mention 128GB SSD cache and then mention just the use of 64GB. Is the other 64GB meant for overprovisioning or is there some other reason?
Either way, it's all progress. I will say my wife's SSHD in her new laptop is far better than the 5400RPM HDD that is still in my laptop that I just got back from her. It's no SSD though. You know it's a SSHD when you write to it.