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September 30, 2008 11:57 AM PDT

Super Talent to release budget solid-state drives

by Dong Ngo
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Two weeks after announcing two new high-speed solid-state drives (SSD), Super Talent Technology on Tuesday announced it will release the MasterDrive LX as a budget solid-state drive later this week.

(Credit: Super Talent Technology)

The MasterDrive LX comes in 64GB and 128GB versions and will cost about $179 and $300, respectively. Both drives are SATA-II and use NAND flash technology. They will be compatible with computers that support the ever-popular 2.5-inch SATA hard drive.

The low prices do come with a shortcoming: the throughput speed. The new MasterDrive LX drives are significantly slower than other SSDs; it's even slower than some regular SATA hard drives. They support sequential read speeds of up to 100MB per second and sequential write speeds of up to 40MB per second. To put this in perspective, regular SATA hard drives can offer about 100MB per second, while the new Intel SSDs reportedly offer up to 240MB per second throughput speed.

However, the MasterDrive LX is still more desirable than regular hard drives in terms of battery life and durability. I hope this is just the beginning and soon you'll be able to buy SSDs for the same prices you currently pay for regular SATA hard drives.

Dong Ngo is a CNET editor who covers networking and network storage, and writes about anything else he finds interesting. You can also listen to his podcast at insidecnetlabs.cnet.com. E-mail Dong.
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by Harlan879 September 30, 2008 12:15 PM PDT
Also, SSDs have much, much lower latency on random-access reads and writes, even if their sequential speed may be less. 100 MB/second is still plenty for tasks like hi-def video, which is the only common application where sequential speed numbers are really relevant.
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by Someone-else September 30, 2008 3:29 PM PDT
SSDs are getting better.
but looks like most people will wait until the 1Gb/US$1 before buying them.
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