Monday, March 20th 2017

BIOSTAR Announces the M200 Series M.2 SSD

BIOSTAR is thrilled to announce its latest addition to its great line-up of products with its newest offering from its storage family of products with the new BIOSTAR M200 Series solid-state drives. Designed for high-performance, low-profile applications, the BIOSTAR M200 Series SSD is intended for systems that require high-speed storage in a low-profile form factor like notebooks, SFF PCs and HTPCs. Available in 120GB and 240GB capacity, the BIOSTAR M200 SSD is perfect for those looking to upgrade their system with a new SSD or speed-up their mobile device for better performance and battery life.

New-generation systems come with M.2 slots that utilize high-speed connection to your system which is the best interface when you want the most from your system. M.2 form factor storage like the BIOSTAR M200 M.2 SSD come in low-profile designs which allow users to insert them in most devices that support M.2 2280. M.2 also has the benefit of zero noise, low heat output and low power draw making them an ideal upgrade for the power user looking to step-up their system performance while gaining the advantage of M.2 storage.
Go Faster with BIOSTAR M200 Series M.2 SSD
Rated for up to 530MB/s read performance, applications will load faster and your sytem will boot-up quicker than traditional hard drives. Large files load faster and makes your system feel significantly more responsive thanks to the im prove storage performance offered by the BIOSTAR M200 SSD.

Newer systems with M.2 SSD support can greatly experience improved battery life and storage performance thanks to the BIOSTAR M200 which makes it a great upgrade for ultrabooks and notebooks. Inside, the BIOSTAR M200 M.2 SSD is powered by a Marvell controller which is complimented by BGA flash memory package which has improved write and read speeds.
For more information, visit the product page.
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12 Comments on BIOSTAR Announces the M200 Series M.2 SSD

#1
TheLostSwede
News Editor
I'm sorry, but why would anyone buy this mediocre SSD? It would be a downgrade for anyone that already owns an M.2 drive.
Posted on Reply
#2
TheinsanegamerN
So another SATA M.2 drive with super low capacity. Yawn.
Posted on Reply
#3
Prima.Vera
This has to be like 20$ to be even taken into consideration.
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#4
chaosmassive
if priced right, it could really attractive drive to buy
Posted on Reply
#5
TheLostSwede
News Editor
chaosmassiveif priced right, it could really attractive drive to buy
That's a big IF. Biostar is hardly an SSD player, so they're most likely simply buying and off-the-shelf product and slapping their brand on it, so the pricing is unlikely to be very good.
Posted on Reply
#6
Xajel
TheLostSwedeI'm sorry, but why would anyone buy this mediocre SSD? It would be a downgrade for anyone that already owns an M.2 drive.
Some users don't have PCIe M.2, and some has PCIe M.2 for the OS. but they need another SSD for another purpose ( cache, second OS, etc ) and they want the best price/gb.
Posted on Reply
#7
TheLostSwede
News Editor
XajelSome users don't have PCIe M.2, and some has PCIe M.2 for the OS. but they need another SSD for another purpose ( cache, second OS, etc ) and they want the best price/gb.
That was not what my comment was about. This is slower than many cheap M.2 SATA drives from well known SSD makers. There is simply no reason to buy this drive, unless it's $20 as mentioned above.
Posted on Reply
#8
dj-electric
BIOSTAR is the leader of weird design and product choices. That's for sure. So many odd things the past year
Posted on Reply
#9
silentbogo
A little addition to spec: it is based on Marvell 88NV1120 controller.
One of the main features is that it has a built-in SDRAM, so at least we know that it will not be one of those rebranded cache-less ultralow-budget drives.
www.techpowerup.com/207855/marvell-announces-dram-less-nvme-ssd-controller

It is very similar to Transcend MTS820. May be useful for price/performance reference, if you can find any.
Posted on Reply
#10
P4-630
If they make a 1TB version in the near future and it's really affordable, I could use it for some storage and few games.
Since I took out the HDD cage of my case and have 2 2.5" drives behind the motherboard I have only left a M.2 slot for some more storage.
Posted on Reply
#11
bug
upgrade their system with a new SSD or speed-up their mobile device for better performance and battery life
[translation]bottom of the barrel/whatever OEMs could spare[/translation]
Posted on Reply
#12
TheLostSwede
News Editor
silentbogoA little addition to spec: it is based on Marvell 88NV1120 controller.
One of the main features is that it has a built-in SDRAM, so at least we know that it will not be one of those rebranded cache-less ultralow-budget drives.
www.techpowerup.com/207855/marvell-announces-dram-less-nvme-ssd-controller

It is very similar to Transcend MTS820. May be useful for price/performance reference, if you can find any.
SRAM ≠ DRAM cache.

In this case it's the cache for the Cortex R5 real time processor.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_random-access_memory
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