Wednesday, July 16th 2008

RiData Announces Low-cost MLC SSDs

Advanced Media, Inc., is a manufacturer and marketer of the popular Ridata brand of recordable CD and DVD media, electronic storage products, and digital media accessories. The company is pleased to introduce its Ridata Ultra-S Plus Series of Solid State Drives (SSD) featuring faster transfer speeds than current Ultra-S products. Ultra-S Plus MLC now offers users products featuring a Multi-Level Cell (MLC) SATA configuration for fast read and write speeds plus larger storage capacities at a lower cost.

"We are pleased to offer laptop and other mobile computing device users an affordable SSD alternative to Hard Disk Drives (HDD). SSD drives offer a host of benefits over traditional hard disk drives especially for notebooks. Cool and silent running, low battery usage, fast data access, dependable performance and resistance to temperature, shock, vibration and humidity make SSD ideal for the mobile computing environment, remarked Harvey Liu, Advanced Media President.
Data Integrity
Ridata SSD features no moving parts making it resistant to vibration, shock, humidity and temperature extremes. It is very reliable with more than 4,000,000 hours Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF). Data integrity is ensured by static wear leveling and Reed-Solomon ECC (RS- 6 symbols). With SMART features and write endurance cycle (P/E) up to 1,000,000 times (depending on capacity used), the Ridata SSD drive is built to keep data safe and secure.

Technology
The Ridata 64 GB and 128 GB Ridata Ultra-S Plus MLC features MLC technology, the drive stores two bits of data per cell, providing consistent, fast performance and extremely low-power consumption at a more affordable cost. The Ridata SSD is lightweight and ideal for the performance-driven and rugged environments that laptops and other mobile computing devices experience. Compatibility with current laptops is ensured by a traditional Serial ATA (SATA) connection with 7-pin signal segment and 15-pin power segment.

Performance
User time on a laptop or other mobile computing application is dramatically extended, due to the drive's low-five-volt power consumption. With no mechanical parts and minimal heat generation the Ridata SSD drive is a natural alternative for a greener environment. Meeting bus interface industry standard Serial ATA (SATA) ensures no host compatibility or upgrading issues. The Ridata drive offers reliable temperature (0 to 70C) resistance, assuring long-lasting data storage.

Availability
All capacities of the Ridata Ultra-S Plus SSD Series MLC will be available in late July. Visit www.ritekusa.com for more product information and retail availability.
Source: Advanced Media Inc.
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13 Comments on RiData Announces Low-cost MLC SSDs

#1
PVTCaboose1337
Graphical Hacker
If the price is right, I wanna do two of these as my next HD in my main computer.
Posted on Reply
#2
chron
It lists low battery usage as a benefit over HDD, but there was an artical posted just a few days ago talking about how they actually require more energy than hdds... hmmm
Posted on Reply
#3
PVTCaboose1337
Graphical Hacker
chronIt lists low battery usage as a benefit over HDD, but there was an artical posted just a few days ago talking about how they actually require more energy than hdds... hmmm
There was also a COUNTER article on Tom's that said the SSD's were more efficient.
Posted on Reply
#4
chron
PVTCaboose1337There was also a COUNTER article on Tom's that said the SSD's were more efficient.
:confused: so who should we trust?
Posted on Reply
#5
kwchang007
Yes!!!! cheap SSD's....hopefully these will actually be kinda competitive with hard drives.
Posted on Reply
#6
phanbuey
In raid these would work amazing... 2 cheap SSD's (a bit of an oxymoron, i know) in raid 0 should be :respect::respect::respect::respect:
Posted on Reply
#7
Megasty
4,000,000 hrs b4 failure huh. Sweet, too bad there's only one way to test that. Anyone have 450+ yrs to burn :p
Posted on Reply
#8
kwchang007
Megasty4,000,000 hrs b4 failure huh. Sweet, too bad there's only one way to test that. Anyone have 450+ yrs to burn :p
But what's the fine print on that? I mean I'm sure if someone went beserk on it, it would fail far before then. Maybe it's 4,000,000 hrs with only light reading and writing every hour.
Posted on Reply
#9
russianboy
kwchang007But what's the fine print on that? I mean I'm sure if someone went beserk on it, it would fail far before then. Maybe it's 4,000,000 hrs with only light reading and writing every hour.
Yeah, if somebody is constantly reading and writing, it might fail only in a hundred years!

I want a drive that will last me through the millennium, dammit! :p
Posted on Reply
#10
kwchang007
russianboyYeah, if somebody is constantly reading and writing, it might fail only in a hundred years!

I want a drive that will last me through the millennium, dammit! :p
lol well honestly, if you take an average user that has total read/writes amount to like an hour for say 12 hours of being on, then that's a 1/12. It just depends on what they said, like when apple says 4 gb is enough to fit 1000 songs....that's at x kbps in aac I think. You could fit more or less in there depending on the encoding.
Posted on Reply
#11
Baum
won't buy it look at their Homepage:
"Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers error '80004005'

[Microsoft][ODBC Microsoft Access Driver] Not enough space on disk.

/index.asp, line 10 "

maybe they use their own storage products ;-)
Posted on Reply
#12
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
Baumwon't buy it look at their Homepage:
"Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers error '80004005'

[Microsoft][ODBC Microsoft Access Driver] Not enough space on disk.

/index.asp, line 10 "

maybe they use their own storage products ;-)
that error is still there, lol.
Posted on Reply
#13
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
Fixed link.
Posted on Reply
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