PCI-E SSD Does 1000 MB/sec.

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[citation][nom]hillarymakesmecry[/nom]So if I wait 1 year this will more than likely be less than $200.[/citation]


less likely.
 
[citation][nom]dreamphantom_1977[/nom]LOL, nice catch. NP... Let me just talk to my banker about refinancing my house...Seriously though, just curious, will card affect the pcie bandwidth for my graphics card in anyways?[/citation]

Depends on your chipset. I everything past the P45 should be able to do it.
 
I should build and package these things, and sell them under the brand-name 'Isolinear Chips'.

A few geeks would purchase, and I'd make my investment back. If I am successful enough, I'll get a cease and desist order from some Paramount executive.

Ahh, dreams.
 
[citation][nom]Matt_B[/nom]"However, despite its seemingly unusual size, the SSD comes with a great benefit: super-fast read and writes of 1000 MB/sec and 1000 MB/sec respectively, making it around three to five times faster than standard SATA solutions thanks to the PCI-e connection."Amazing is the word indeed.[/citation]
lol. I was asleep at the KB.
 
Then of course there's this monster for the Enterprise market:

http://hothardware.com/News/RamSan620-Is-Worlds-Largest-SLC-Flash-SSD/

The 3rd posted comment is a good explanation of its benefits.

As for cost, it's a snip at $220K. 😀

Ian.

 
Ok, yes it's expensive, but check out the fusion-io device. These things aren't even available yet and the price/spec wars are already going strong. And I'm sure there are plenty of other companies that have seen the future and have products in development. I don't expect these prices to hold.
 
You could load to a ram drive from this, and then you would have many GB/s transfer rates, and a reasonable load time.
 
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