Samsung hypes its Z-SSD as a 3D XPoint rival
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In another interesting development revealed at the Flash Memory Summit this week.
Read more.
Re: Samsung hypes its Z-SSD as a 3D XPoint rival
I was think the other week that we must be due some news on larger sized SSDs. Hoping we get a competitively priced consumer product at the 4Tb mark. Please!
Re: Samsung hypes its Z-SSD as a 3D XPoint rival
price of the z-ssd is equivalent to D.Trump's earning in a minute
Re: Samsung hypes its Z-SSD as a 3D XPoint rival
IMO there is no difference especially for home users if you have average 500Mbps or new 1.5 times faster 800Mbps SSD drives. Usually even for home servers it makes no difference.
It is certainly step ahead but our computers won't be able to use that. Obviously excluding massive virtualization solutions and data centres...
Re: Samsung hypes its Z-SSD as a 3D XPoint rival
Quote:
Originally Posted by
username2
IMO there is no difference especially for home users if you have average 500Mbps or new 1.5 times faster 800Mbps SSD drives. Usually even for home servers it makes no difference.
It is certainly step ahead but our computers won't be able to use that. Obviously excluding massive virtualization solutions and data centres...
I suspect Google Chrome will find a way of not only eating all my RAM, but SSD bandwidth too...
Re: Samsung hypes its Z-SSD as a 3D XPoint rival
Still waiting for XPoint to hit consumers. Although I doubt it'll trickle down to consumer-grade SSD's in 2.5" format for years, if ever.. :-(
I can\'t help feeling that we\'re lagging behind a bit with the 6G SATA interface on consumer-grade kit. I\'ve seen the odd 12G SATA interface on some high end boards but that\'s about it.
Re: Samsung hypes its Z-SSD as a 3D XPoint rival
Quote:
Originally Posted by
chinf
Quote:
Originally Posted by
username2
IMO there is no difference especially for home users if you have average 500Mbps or new 1.5 times faster 800Mbps SSD drives. Usually even for home servers it makes no difference.
It is certainly step ahead but our computers won't be able to use that. Obviously excluding massive virtualization solutions and data centres...
I suspect Google Chrome will find a way of not only eating all my RAM, but SSD bandwidth too...
Try managing a server with Microsoft Exchange on it.. without tweaks it will literally gobble up as much RAM as you give it! :-P