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Solidigm Launches D5-P5336 PCIe Data Center SSDs With 122 TB Capacity

Nomad76

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Solidigm, a leading provider of innovative NAND flash memory solutions, announced today the introduction of the world's highest capacity PCIe solid-state drive (SSD): the 122 TB (terabyte) Solidigm D5-P5336 data center SSD. The D5-P5336 doubles the storage space of Solidigm's earlier 61.44 TB version of the drive and is the world's first SSD with unlimited Random Write endurance for five years—offering an ideal solution for AI and data-intensive workloads. Just how much storage is 122.88 TB? Roughly enough for 4K-quality copies of every movie theatrically released in the 1990s, 2.6 times over.

Data storage power, thermal and space constraints are accelerating as AI adoption increases. Power and space-efficient, the new 122 TB D5-P5336 delivers industry-leading storage efficiency from the core data center to the edge. Data center operators can deploy with confidence the 122 TB D5-P5336 from Solidigm, the proven QLC (quad-level cell) density leader with more than 100EB (exabytes) of QLC-based product shipped since 2018.



"Data center architects are scrambling to solve their power and space efficiency needs, and they can help address these issues with Solidigm's 122 TB D5-P5336 that is designed to make every watt and square inch count," said Greg Matson, Senior Vice President of Strategic Planning and Marketing at Solidigm. "This massive capacity SSD is a game-changer—using far fewer watts per terabyte and freeing up valuable energy for other data center and edge power priorities."

Ultra-High Density SSDs Improving Power and Space Equation

By the numbers, the 122 TB D5-P5336 drive:
  • Consumes up to 84 percent less storage power in network-attached storage (NAS) deployments versus legacy hybrid hard-disk drive (HDD) + TLC (triple-level cell) solutions;
  • Improves power density at the edge with 3.4X more terabytes per watt versus 30 TB TLC;
  • Enables up to 4 petabytes of storage per one rack unit; and
  • Is designed by the pioneers of QLC, so can be deployed with confidence.

The new Solidigm drives also store more data in a smaller footprint, enabling more efficient and more scalable data center and edge designs that:
  • Achieve up to a 4:1 NAS footprint reduction versus legacy HDD + TLC solutions; and
  • Store 4x more data in space-constrained edge installations versus 30 TB TLC.

These modern-day high density QLC drives can perform up to 15 percent better on data intensive workloads including content delivery networks, general purpose storage applications and object store applications compared to an entry level high-density data center TLC offering from the competition. D5-P5336 can exhibit up to 40 percent better read response rate under sustained write workloads.

"The AI opportunity does not come without challenges, and organizations today are making unprecedented infrastructure power and space decisions," said Travis Vigil, senior vice president, ISG Product Management, Dell Technologies. "Dell Technologies believes that higher density provides the path to maximizing storage energy efficiency while minimizing data center footprint. As we strive towards density in our own solutions, we look forward to continued storage innovations like Solidigm's new 122 TB D5-P5336 solid-state drive."

With this launch, Solidigm continues its commitment to delivering industry-leading quality and reliability with SSDs in form factors that easily plug into standard storage servers.

Now sampling to customers, the new 122 TB drive is a strong extension to the company's high-capacity SSDs for AI and other data-intensive workloads. With this drive, Solidigm further extends its high-capacity QLC SSD leadership with drives from 7 to 122 TB that share the same controller, making them easier for customers to qualify.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
 
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The capacity sounds amazing and I'm sure these are great for what they do. Of course the price is astronomical for us consumers. But when I hear QLC anything I can't help but cringe.
 
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The capacity sounds amazing and I'm sure these are great for what they do. Of course the price is astronomical for us consumers. But when I hear QLC anything I can't help but cringe.
You're not the intended consumer of this though.
 
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Why none of these articles say how much they cost or at least a ballpark figure?
 
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Why none of these articles say how much they cost or at least a ballpark figure?
They are all around $10k-13k each unfortunately. I would love a few of them for a nice silent NAS.
 
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You're not the intended consumer of this though.
Why ty Captain lol. Did the "Data Center SSD" portion of the title clue ya in... :roll: You can't let that stop you from considering the possibilities.
 
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Must come with a terrible handsom price!
About the name "Solidigm" I heared someone says it's a combination of "Solid" and "Paradigm" and pronounced Solidime :D
 
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