Wednesday, October 10th 2007
Fusion-io Demonstrates $19,000 640GB SSD PCI-e Device
Fusion-io has presented a massively fast and big solid-state flash hard drive (SSD) on a PCI-Express x4 card at the Demofall 07 conference in San Diego. Fusion is promising sustained data rates of 800Mb/sec for reading and 600Mb/sec for writing. The company plans to start releasing the cards at 80GB and will scale to 320 and 640GB. Supported operating systems include Linux Red Hat AS4.0, Windows Vista and Windows XP. All this performance comes with a certain price, the 640GB ioDrive will cost $19,000 USD when releasein in Q1 2008.
Source:
Fusion-io
41 Comments on Fusion-io Demonstrates $19,000 640GB SSD PCI-e Device
bloody gorgeous,i wish i had $19k to blow.
For that kind of money you could buy 180 500GB 7200 rpm hard drivers for a grand total of about 90TB
I think I'll wait until they are about $100.
yeah i point out the obvious :D
thats way too much money for a "drive"...
Honestly thats too much money on anything short of a super computer processor.
Take the price of a server system that has the same amount of storage, in SAS drives, RAID controllers, and given failure rate, you have a device that provides higher performance, with no moving parts, and is much smaller and uses less energy?
Go price a set of 3 SAS drives, a RAID controller, and take into account that three drives will hold only as much as two drives when in RAID 5. So multiply that by however many setups it takes to reach 640GB, plus how many server rack systems to hold the drives. Plus energy to run the drives, boards, cards, and cooling.
www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?item=N82E16816151008
So 8 drives in RAID 5 511GB of storage. $6519.00
If you have 200 employees waiting 10 seconds each per request, at 6 requests per day, that is a minute of lost productivity, per employee per day, and at a mean const of .24 per minute and a assumed work year of 330 days per employee you have a loss of $17,280.00 for the year due to the wait.
So considering all the above, it is well worth it. If you need it.
You'd have to spend a hell of a lot on an array to get 800 MB/s read 600 MB/s write and i'll bet the seek times on this are less than 10% of what it would be on a huge disk array like that.
You should of seen the stuff I had as a kid to play with.
But back in reality, the place I work at has about 20 employees and 10 external. We have two 2P/SC servers. Yeah.
is really neat-o! what kind a chip you got in there? a dorito?!
If their wise they will releqse the 32GB version for less than $300
Flash memory is like ram, its direct access. Shouldnt that mean that the latency is the amount of time the memory is on/off to correctly store/retrieve data without corruption or error?
And an SSD is FAR faster than a Raptor. There is no comparison.