Tuesday, January 20th 2009
Intel Plans to Release 320GB Solid-state Drives in Q4 2009
Bloomberg reports that Intel is planning on releasing a new, higher-capacity solid state drive, which will provide users with up to 320GB of storage capacity. In Q4 this year, the company will begin selling a total of eight new drives with capacity of 320GB, that will be part of Intel's Extreme and Mainstream SSD series. The chips used for these drives will be build using 32-nanometer production technology, Intel's most advanced manufacturing method for the time being. The source also clamins that Intel has already contacted its partners and informed them for the new drives.
The world's largest chipmaker also plans to introduce a new product called "Braidwood" that's slated for Q4 2009 too. It will include as much as 16GB of flash memory that will create "better responsiveness and boot-up time." Though it's unclear whether this solution will be integrated into Intel based motherboards or it will stand for an optional separate storage drive, made only for installing operating systems.
Source:
Bloomberg
The world's largest chipmaker also plans to introduce a new product called "Braidwood" that's slated for Q4 2009 too. It will include as much as 16GB of flash memory that will create "better responsiveness and boot-up time." Though it's unclear whether this solution will be integrated into Intel based motherboards or it will stand for an optional separate storage drive, made only for installing operating systems.
9 Comments on Intel Plans to Release 320GB Solid-state Drives in Q4 2009
SSD is perfect for storing the O/S since it allows fast boot up time plus fast disk paging, you only need 64GB at most, even a fast 32GB SSD will do it for Windows 7.
wow! bby is expensive.
Hard drives are getting faster all the time, but granted won't match a SSD. SSD are to expensive though. if a 320gb was say 2 x the price of a 320hdd then sure i would buy it, that menas its about $100-$150. BUT right now as you all know $150 gets you a 16gb ssd
only first gen SSD's had the shit lifetimes, and they were the crap brands - not intel.
Oh and intels ones are almost always SLC.
freaksaviour: $140 au gets me a 30GB OCZ Core V2 SSD. They're a bit cheaper than you realise. and always compare prices of an SSD to that of a raptor/velociraptor - they're high speed drives, not storage ones. (sure they dont match the price/performance of a velociraptor 300GB yet... but when they do, i'll be leaping on them)