Thursday, April 11, 2013

Intel SSD 525 Review: Five mSATA Drives, From 30 To 240 GB

Intel has a new family of mSATA-based SSDs powered by SandForce's second-gen controller. Dubbed the SSD 525, we have all five capacities in our lab. Can the promise of strong performance, 5,000 P/E cycles, and a five-year warranty make up for high prices?
Of the advances we've seen from solid-state storage over the years, perhaps the most under-appreciated is freedom to build SSDs in form factors that aren't married to mechanical rotational media. Obviously, 3.5” and 2.5” hard drives are well-established as standards. But in a world dominated by ever-shrinking devices, pushing conventional disks any smaller has been problematic. It's outright difficult to create a rocket-fast disk in a scant 50 mm.
The ability to store non-volatile data in any physical package you'd like means the mobile devices can keep information safe on microSD cards smaller than a postage stamp, and diminutive laptops enjoy storage options that slide right into a motherboard without a second thought to affecting Z-height. Even the largest servers benefit from higher storage density (not to mention obscenely favorable power-to-performance ratios) compared to spinning media.
After four decades, the hard drive market is almost entirely owned by two companies, and both physics and market forces work in tandem to make differentiation a headache.
That isn’t to say that the SSD landscape is so entirely different. A small cabal of fabricators crank out virtually every bit of NAND (pun intended) extant, while LSI SandForce and Marvell provide the lion’s share of controller shipments. Fortunately for us, there’s more than enough variety to keep things interesting. New controllers, new interfaces, and advanced flash manufacturing help push solid-state storage away from the considerations we make while evaluating legacy media. Smaller form factors are finally coming into their own.
SSD revenue is still a rounding error for Intel. Instead, the company's storage products are important for driving sales of its bread-and-butter offerings. Conceivably, they'd help take a bit of the sting out of sagging PC sales. A good example is Intel's 2.5” and mSATA-based SSD 311 drives, released alongside its Z68 Express platform to illustrate its caching features. Elsewhere, the SSD DC S3700 enterprise drives are shipping in 1.8” flavors to put more juice in dense blade servers (another market where Intel's high-margin server components shine a little brighter complemented by solid-state storage).
Now, Intel is dropping out of the motherboard business to focus on a future dominated by alternative form factors. And even though Ultrabooks haven't been as successful as the company hoped, a world of x86-powered tablets, NUCs, and all-in-ones necessitate NAND-driven storage. With that in mind, Intel recently introduced a new family of 6 Gb/s mSATA-based SSDs to address growing demand for pint-sized drives.

Meet The SSD 525

Today, we have a quintet of SSD 525 drives (code-named Lincoln Crest) that allow us to examine performance at the 30, 60, 120, 180, and 240 GB capacity points. Despite its new name, the SSD 525 is still mostly an SSD 520 in an mSATA form factor and Intel's LLKi firmware on top. Originally, that drive was the first fruit of a partnership between Intel and SandForce, which debuted a year ago, was driven by the SF-2281 controller, and featured specialized firmware. The SSD 520 included highly-binned synchronous 25 nm MLC flash from Intel's own fabs, and Lincoln Crest keeps the same tradition going.
The 30 GB model is particularly interesting to us, since it’s heavily outgunned, packing only four 64 Gb dies. With just half of the SF-2281’s channels populated, it looks to be the single-core Celeron of this family. Given how poorly 60/64 GB drives wielding eight 64 Gb die have performed in the past, we're definitely curious to see what the runt of the litter can do for its fairly hefty $53 MSRP.
Each member of the SSD 525 line-up wields Intel's 25 nm synchronous ONFi 2 flash from its private stash of highly-binned NAND. Due to mSATA's physical dimensions, four or less package emplacements are necessary, meaning capacity is restricted based on current die packaging. That still leaves all the most popular capacity points covered, leaving room for the interface to evolve as 128 Gb die become more popular.
As MLC (and TLC) NAND manufactured using the latest technology nudges endurance to new lows, it's increasingly difficult to get flash rated for 5,000 P/E cycles on the consumer side. Intel's SSD 525 might not be that adventurous, but it does have longevity going for it at least. And in a 50 mm travel size, too.
Intel SSD 525 (mSATA)Total FlashDie CountChannels/InterleavingNAND Part No.
30 GB 32 GB44x129F64G08LCME2
60 GB64 GB88x129F16B08MCME2
120 GB128 GB168x229F32B08NCME2
180 GB192 GB246x429F64B08PCME1
240 GB256 GB328x429F64B08PCME1

The SF-2281-VB1-SDC is an eight-channel controller. Simply populating each of the ASIC's channels doesn't mean all that much; die interleaving is more important. Interestingly, the 30 and 180 GB models don't utilize all eight channels. The 30 GB version populates just four with no interleaving, while the 180 GB varietal uses six channels. Each discrete channel needs a couple of die to spread operations across, lowering latency and increasing speed. In the -2281, four-way interleaving offers optimal performance. So, referencing the table above, the 240 GB drive should facilitate peak performance with all eight channels individually firing across four die.
In the case of the 30 GB SSD 525, we're expecting it to be severely hamstrung. The 180 GB model should nip at the largest 525's heels, though. For now, it's important to note that the 180 GB's 24 dice spread over six channels with 4x interleaving is practically identical to using all eight channels with 3x interleaving. The point? Just because each channel isn't being used doesn't mean speed is going to suffer. It all comes down to interleaving in modern controllers, especially the scalable SF-2281.

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By Friendly Computers
Copyright: 2010-01-28

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By Friendly Computers
Copyright: 2010-01-28

Give us a call today: 281-554-5500 or visit Friendly Computers to schedule an appointment.


http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-525-msata-review,3449.html

Thursday, April 4, 2013

GameStop CEO Says Xbox 720 is 'Hot and Compelling'


GameStop is very excited about the next generation of consoles.
GameStop said earlier this week that it expects demand for Sony's PlayStation 4 to outstrip supplies of the console at launch. However, the company also had some rather nice things to say about Microsoft's next generation console, the rumored Xbox 720. GamesIndustry reports that GameStop CEO J. Paul Raines is very excited for the next generation of Xbox. Speaking to GamesIndustry, Raines referred to the next generation of Xbox as 'hot' and 'compelling.'
"We've been spending a lot of time with Microsoft, but we have to let them take the lead on this, but it will be a very hot, compelling device," Raines is quoted as saying. "They are doing some really cool stuff, and I'm eager to hear them start their announcements because I think the world is going to stand up and take notice."
Raines also talked about the demand the retailer has seen for the PS4 (via its 'First to Know' sign-up list and feedback from PowerUp Rewards members) and said that GameStop expects similar demand for the Xbox 720 as well.
"There's a lot of demand for PS4, and I think there will be for the next Xbox as well, once it's announced," GamesIndustry cites him as saying.
While Sony has offered some information on its upcoming console, Microsoft has yet to spill any beans at all. It's thought the company might announce the Xbox 720 at E3 this coming June, but the company has yet to confirm that. Recent rumors regarding the Xbox 720 point to an '"Always On, Always Connected' approach with games installed to a HDD as opposed to played off of an optical disc.

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By Friendly Computers
Copyright: 2010-01-28

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By Friendly Computers
Copyright: 2010-01-28

Give us a call today: 281-554-5500 or visit Friendly Computers to schedule an appointment.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Report: Google Working on Haswell-based Chromebooks


Report: Google Working on Haswell-based Chromebooks

 by  - source: Phoronix
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Google may be looking for a performance punch with less battery drain in its next premium Chromebook.
ZoomPhoronix reports that Google may already be working on another high-end Chromebook based on Intel's upcoming 22-nm Haswell platform slated to arrive in June. The news is based on recent Haswell-based comments made by Google/Chrome developers including this one about dynamic cbmem and this one about chromeos function, among others.
Google's latest Chromebook, the Pixel, sports an Intel Core i5 "Ivy Bridge" dual-core processor clocked at 1.8 GHz, an Intel HD Graphics 4000 GPU, 4 GB of DDR3 RAM, and a 12.85-inch multi-touch display with a 2560 x 1700 resolution (239 PPI). Also thrown into the premium Chromebook are two USB 2.0 ports, a 2-in-1 card reader, dual band Wireless N and Bluetooth 3.0 connectivity, and an SSD ranging between 32 GB and 64 GB capacities.
With the launch of the Chromebook Pixel, Google is undoubtedly trying to lead the Chromebook pack with a premium product much like it has with the Nexus brands in the smartphone and tablet markets. But as Phoronix points out, Google didn't provide Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge Chromebook solutions until long after the initial hardware launch. However this time Google may want to be one of the initial Haswell launch OEMs.
Intel's upcoming Haswell 22-nm chip is targeted at mobile devices based on its low power drain. Intel has stated in the past that devices using Haswell chips will see double the battery life when compared to those using Intel's third-generation Ivy Bridge processors. The power envelope alone should make Haswell a prime candidate for Google's next premium Chromebook.
Outside the Chromebook Pixel, Google's Chrome OS-based notebooks are typically budget machines focused on web-based apps and constant online use. The current crop mainly consists of ARM Cortex A-15 based SoCs (Samsung Exynos 5) and Intel's Celeron CPU (Acer C7).

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By Friendly Computers
Copyright: 2010-01-28

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By Friendly Computers
Copyright: 2010-01-28

Give us a call today: 281-554-5500 or visit Friendly Computers to schedule an appointment.