Posted on 08/11/2016 12:28:21 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Samsung showcased its 4th generation Vertical NAND (64-layer triple-level-cell V-NAND) and a line-up of high-performance, high-capacity solid state drives (SSDs) available for its enterprise customers as well as the Z-SSD.
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Samsungs new flash storage devices are expected to contribute significantly to the global IT industry in meeting the growing storage requirements of todays enterprise computing environment. These solutions will accommodate enormous amounts of data, and extremely high-speed information processing, while enhancing the total cost of ownership (TCO) for data centers.
With our 4th generation V-NAND technology, we can provide leading-edge differentiated values in high capacity, high performance and compact product dimensions, which together will contribute to our customers achieving better TCO results, said Young-Hyun Jun, President of the Memory Business at Samsung Electronics. We will continue to introduce more advanced V-NAND solutions and expand our flash business initiatives in maximizing an unbeatable combination of performance and value.
Samsung introduced its 4th generation, 64-layer triple-level-cell V-NAND flash memory that pushes the envelope of NAND scaling, performance and storage capacity. Stacking 64 layers of cell-arrays, the new V-NAND can increase its single-die density to an industry-leading 512Gb and its IO speed to 800Mbps, which further distinguishes Samsungs technology leadership in three-dimensional NAND cell structure design and production. Starting in August 2013, Samsung has previously introduced three generations of industry-first V-NAND products with 24, 32 and 48-layer vertical cell-array stacking technologies.
Samsung plans to provide the worlds first 4th generation V-NAND flash memory products in the fourth quarter of this year, which will help manufacturers to produce faster, more stylish and portable computing devices, while offering consumers a more responsive computing environment.
Samsungs latest Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) SSD is the world largest single drive ever introduced to the industry based on 512-gigabit (Gb) V-NAND chips. A total of 512 V-NAND chips are stacked in 16 layers to form a 1-terabyte (TB) package and the 32-terabyte (TB) SSD contains 32 of those packages.
By adopting a new 4th generation V-NAND design, the 32TB SAS SSD can reduce system space requirements up to 40 times compared with the same type of system using two racks of hard disk drives (HDDs). The 32TB SAS SSD will come in a 2-5-inch form factor and be produced in 2017. Samsung also expects that SSDs with more than 100TB of storage capacity will be available by 2020, thanks to continued refinement of V-NAND technology.
The Samsung 1TB BGA SSD features an extremely compact, ball grid array (BGA) package design that contains all essential SSD components including triple-level-cell V-NAND flash chips, LPDDR4 mobile DRAM and a state-of-the-art Samsung controller.
It will deliver unprecedented performance, reading sequentially at 1,500MB/s and writing sequentially at 900MB/s. By reducing its size up to 50 percent compared to its predecessor, the SSD weighs only about one gram (less than half the weight of a U.S. dime), making it ideal for ultra-compact next generation notebooks, tablets and convertibles.
Next year, Samsung plans to launch its 1TB BGA SSD by adopting a high-density packaging technology called FO-PLP (Fan-out Panel Level Packaging) which Samsung Electronics developed with Samsung Electro-Mechanics.
Samsung has also developed a high performance, ultra-low latency SSD solution, the Z-SSD. Samsungs Z-SSD shares the fundamental structure of V-NAND and has a unique circuit design and controller that can maximize performance, with four times faster latency and 1.6 times better sequential reading than the Samsung PM963 NVMe** SSD.
The Z-SSD will be used in systems that deal with extremely intensive real-time analysis as well as extending high performance to all types of workloads. It is expected to be released next year.
Anyone remember the olden days (i.e., the late ‘80s) when a 30mb hard drive was kind of a big deal? Crazy to see storage up one million-fold... in a smaller form factor.
32TB? That’s a lot of pron.
30MB? 30MB? we used to dream of having 30MB. I had to save my programs on a cassette tape.
See #4.
link you posted has nothing to do with samsung and the link in the comment doesn’t work.
Yup. In early 1985, I bought a 20MB hard drive for $400 and my boss got pissed at me, because he bought a 5MB hard drive a year earlier for more than $400. A 20MB drive was huge! You could store a lot of 5-1/4 floppy disc content on it, either 360KB or 1.2MB in size.
That was when $3500 was real money.
I am pretty sue they announced a 60T drive either today or yesterday.
And saved my programs to cassette multiple times to ensure that I could load them again.
Tandy Color Computer, Extended Color BASIC, 16KB RAM, MC6809 Assembler
“Anyone remember the olden days (i.e., the late 80s) when a 30mb hard drive was kind of a big deal? “
In the ‘olden days’ there were no hard drives ...
Try this :
Samsung announces 4th Generation V-NAND and 32TB SSD in 2.5" package
Not sure why the link in the articcl doesn't work.... I was trying to get the photos into the article.
...With speeds that are unimaginably faster.
Something like this takes away the disk as the bottleneck, regardless of what you're trying to do with it.
Prons for everyone!
Why does a SSD drive maintain data when powered off??
Is it a trickle voltage charged capacitor?? If so that still needs electrical power. How long will the data last?? A decade?? Longer??
Holy carp, that $3,495 is for a refurbished one. The new one (see the fine print) is $4,495. Let’s see, computer or car?
I don't thick I ever fill the massive amount of storage doing mostly Quark word processing documents, Apple Basic programs, and 123 spreadsheets. The Apple /// was widely reviled but I loved mine. It was lightning fast at the above tasks, particularly the Quark word processor which was the best and by far the fastest on any PC.
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