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Micron Launches 6550 ION 60TB PCIe Gen5 NVMe SSD Series

Nomad76

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Micron Technology, Inc., today announced it has begun qualification of the 6550 ION NVMe SSD with customers. The Micron 6550 ION is the world's fastest 60 TB data center SSD and the industry's first E3.S and PCIe Gen 5 60 TB SSD. It follows the success of the award-winning 6500 ION and is engineered to provide best-in-class performance, energy efficiency, endurance, security, and rack density for exascale data center deployments. The 6550 ION excels in high-capacity NVMe workloads such as networked AI data lakes, ingest, data preparation and check pointing, file and object storage, public cloud storage, analytic databases, and content delivery.

"The Micron 6550 ION achieves a remarkable 12 GB/s while using just 20 watts of power, setting a new standard in data center performance and energy efficiency," said Alvaro Toledo, vice president and general manager of Micron's Data Center Storage Group. "Featuring a first-to-market 60 TB capacity in an E3.S form factor and up to 20% better energy efficiency than competitive drives, the Micron 6550 ION is a game-changer for high-capacity storage solutions to address the insatiable capacity and power demands of AI workloads."



Delivers unmatched performance and energy efficiency
The Micron 6550 ION is the industry's first PCIe Gen 5 60 TB data center SSD and offers class-leading read and write bandwidth. The drive is also the world's first 60 TB SSD with OCP 2.5 support, introducing the active state power management (ASPM). This new feature allows the drive to idle at 4 watts in the L1 state versus 5 watts in the L0 state, improving energy efficiency up to 20% when idling. Additional power benefits come from the drive's industry-leading and energy-efficient G8 NAND, which is one to three NAND generations ahead of competing 60 TB SSDs, enabling the drive to achieve its published performance numbers using just 20 watts.

Compared to competing 60 TB drives, it delivers up to:
  • 179% faster sequential reads and 179% higher read bandwidth per watt
  • 150% faster sequential writes and 213% higher write bandwidth per watt
  • 80% faster random reads and 99% higher read IOPS per watt

The 6550 ION also excels in critical AI training workloads compared to competitive 60 TB SSDs, achieving:
  • 147% higher performance for NVIDIA Magnum IO GPUDirect Storage (GDS) and 104% better energy efficiency
  • 30% higher 4 KB transfer performance for deep learning IO Unet3D testing and 20% better energy efficiency
  • 151% improvement in completion times for AI model check pointing while competitors consume 209% more energy

Even with an impressive 61.44 TB capacity, the drive can be fully written in just 3.4 hours, while competing drives take up to 150% longer to fill. This allows for faster drive rebuilds and AI training set preparation - improving deployment times, increasing GPU utilization, and enhancing storage resiliency in high capacity NVMe SSDs.

Reduces footprint driving data center efficiency
The Micron 6550 ION is available in E3.S, U.2, and E1.L form factors. As the world's first E3.S 60 TB SSD, the 6550 offers best-in-class density, reducing rack storage needs by up to 67%. It provides industry-leading space efficiency to store over 1.2 petabytes per rack unit (U). Using a 1U high-density server, such as the HPE ProLiant DL360 Gen11 that can accommodate 20 E3.S drives per rack unit, operators can load servers in a single rack with 44.2 petabytes. This solution is 67% denser than 2U servers that often house a maximum of 24 U.2 drives, yielding only 26.5 petabytes per rack. The 6550 61.44 TB E3.S SSD, when compared to 122.88 TB U.2 drives, delivers up to 3.3x the performance per terabyte. This improvement allows for significant server consolidation to optimize data center space and efficiency.

Increases drive endurance and bolsters security
The drive delivers best-in-class 60 TB SSD endurance with 1.0 random drive writes per day (RDWPD) for 16 KB random writes, providing up to 42% more endurance than competing 60 TB SSDs. Additionally, the 6550 ION offers an industry-leading security feature set, including SPDM 1.2 for attestation and SHA-512 for secure signature generation. It is TAA-compliant and FIPS 140-3 L2 certifiable delivering government required levels of security. The Micron 6550 ION is manufactured at multiple sites for supply chain resilience and is built with a vertically integrated architecture, including Micron DRAM, NAND, controller, and firmware.

Industry quotes:
"The introduction of the Micron 6550 ION SSD is a groundbreaking advancement for data-intensive and emerging AI applications. Such innovations in storage technologies enable dense and energy-efficient solutions that evolve our customer's infrastructure capabilities," said Raghu Nambiar, corporate vice president, Data Center Ecosystems and Solutions at AMD. "We are excited to collaborate with Micron in enabling the ecosystem with the latest 5th Gen AMD EPYC processor-based platforms."

"The VAST Data Platform is a unified data platform that seamlessly combines storage, databases, and compute into a single software solution, empowering customers with the capabilities needed to drive their transition to advanced computing and AI," said Tomer Hagay, head of product at VAST Data. "By incorporating VAST's data platform software with the Micron 6550 ION SSD, customers can achieve high capacity, high performance, and energy efficiency to meet the rigorous demands of modern AI workloads."

"WEKA customers are achieving excellent results from their WEKA Data Platform and Micron 6500 ION deployments today. We expect the new Micron 6550 ION SSD will extend this value with enhanced performance density and energy efficiency benefits for enterprise AI environments," said Nilesh Patel, chief product officer at WEKA. "With its impressive 61.44 TB capacity, the Micron 6550 ION will enable our mutual customers to implement rack-dense AI infrastructure solutions without sacrificing performance."

The Micron 6550 ION is now available for sampling globally and is part of Micron's industry-leading data center SSD portfolio.



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News about large enterprise SSD drives only remind us about all the advertisement NAND makers released in the last year about new processes in the consumer space that would bring the price per TB down and enable larger than 8 TB drives - since most of those advertisements and news were released before AI server explosion, I guess none of that is relevant now.

Really, price per TB, largest available drive, largest capacity with normal cost per TB hasn't moved for half a decade - a stagnation unimaginable for the most history of PC!
 
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News about large enterprise SSD drives only remind us about all the advertisement NAND makers released in the last year about new processes in the consumer space that would bring the price per TB down and enable larger than 8 TB drives - since most of those advertisements and news were released before AI server explosion, I guess none of that is relevant now.

Really, price per TB, largest available drive, largest capacity with normal cost per TB hasn't moved for half a decade - a stagnation unimaginable for the most history of PC!
If you are a legacy Gamer the current scene in Consumer NVME is total BS. We get marketing and they try to separate NAND like it is so plentiful in terms of suppliers. Micron themselves are foolish as they could easily release a 8TB NVME or SSD to the Consumer market for consumer prices. I don't mean what we currently pay for that. No I mean what we currently pay for 4TB and then what we pay for 4TB what 2TB was and so on. That is so waiting to happen. The nickel and dime process led Intel to be where they are today and does not need to happen in this space now that TLC is the defacto NAND tech in SSDs and M2s that can perform.

This is 60TB in the form factor of a double sized SSD. This is what we should be posting in the What's Your latest Purchase Thread but with a dedicated consumer focus. You and I know the truth though. Modern Enterprise is where the real money is at so innovations in storage are relegated to that space.
 
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Modern Enterprise is where the real money is at so innovations in storage are relegated to that space.
"Money talks, & bullshit walks"

Money being the big boys that can afford multi-thousands of $$ for their drives, and BS being us little people, who are always hoping some of the former will trickle down to us sooner rather than later and then keep believing the hype time & time again with our fingers crossed...:mad:
 
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That 60TB capacity SSD sounds like it's gonna be quite expensive, meant for servers and enthusiasts with deep pockets. I'd be happier if 8TB-12TB SSDs were available for us Plebs instead, right now, I've a 4TB and a 2TB SATA SSD, and a 4TB and 2TB NVMe M.2 SSDs, and while 12TB SSD storage may sound like a lot, believe me, with modern games, they get filled up quite easily. That's why I'd also gotten a 6TB WD Black HDD for storing older games, and games that I don't play that often. So, I have 12TB of SSD storage, but obviously I'd much prefer to have more as there're always newer game down the road, and these eat up a lot of storage space.
 
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"Money talks, & bullshit walks"

Money being the big boys that can afford multi-thousands of $$ for their drives, and BS being us little people, who are always hoping some of the former will trickle down to us sooner rather than later and then keep believing the hype time & time again with our fingers crossed...:mad:
Collusion and market manipulation.

market needs a new hungry player that’s no where near the sphere of influence of the existing ones
 
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Not gonna happen anytime soon. Even if a new player suddenly appears, he would first focus on a market sector that shows growth, and that is server storage for AI.

I think SSD makers did their market research, and actually found out that for now it doesn't make financial sense to offer reasonably priced 8 TB drives in consumer sector, or offer larger drives. And that "for now" is going on for almost 5 years now.

Imagine if Nvidia decided that RTX 2080 is all we need, and continued to sell it now, with no upgrade in sight?

And reviewers are still telling us that 2 TB drives are huge, and are almost at loss for words at 4 TB drives!
 
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Well, I go the word yesterday that the IT guys will need my lappy & over the weekend for.... wait for it.....wait for it........

Migrating all my internal data to an 8TB WD Black 850X, and my external array to 8x 8TB'ers too....

They just finished moving all our shared drives last weekend, so now everyone will be flying high on speeeedy storage space.....

Good thing too, as I will be receiving a bunch of 3-4TB CAD files next Monday, and will now have a place to keep them locally instead of in da cloudz, and having to download them piecemeal, which is a very time consuming slugfest at best...

BUT, this is a company thing, so the cost is not really an issue, with their deep, deep pockets, but meanwhile, my poor little personal mini-me box is stuck with JUST a 4TB internal & a 4TB external, plus some spinners for off-site back ups, which should keep me good for several years into the future :D
 
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Not gonna happen anytime soon. Even if a new player suddenly appears, he would first focus on a market sector that shows growth, and that is server storage for AI.

I think SSD makers did their market research, and actually found out that for now it doesn't make financial sense to offer reasonably priced 8 TB drives in consumer sector, or offer larger drives. And that "for now" is going on for almost 5 years now.

Imagine if Nvidia decided that RTX 2080 is all we need, and continued to sell it now, with no upgrade in sight?

And reviewers are still telling us that 2 TB drives are huge, and are almost at loss for words at 4 TB drives!
You focus on getting a foot in the door, there is no just getting in to the server market unless you have a special product that fills a need.
a regular consumer is far more likely to try a new brand to replace their current one if there is a significant difference.
 
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You focus on getting a foot in the door, there is no just getting in to the server market unless you have a special product that fills a need.
a regular consumer is far more likely to try a new brand to replace their current one if there is a significant difference.

I'd think that various startup AI service companies would be willing to jump on anything with the remotely right price / performance, fast large storage is a must, and consumer products just aren't useful - mainly because of small capacity.

It's a gold rush moment right now, and we PC enthusiasts can just sit back and watch as none of this is trickling down to PC consumer market, and it isn't planned to. It's even worse than cryptomining in this regard.
 
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