Upcoming Events

HDI Service Management 2010 Conference & Expo
October 6-8, Miami

IT service and technical support professionals gather at the annual HDI Service Management Conference & Expo to explore some of the hottest topics affecting IT service management. The half-day conference workshops provide the processes, frameworks, templates, and tools to help you meet the service demands of your business..

More Events »

Subscribe to Newsletter

  • Keep up with all of the latest news and analysis on the fast-moving IT industry with Network Computing newsletters.
Sign Up

SandForce Attacks SSD Limitations

Tags:

Channel: Data Center, Tapes and Disks

Many enterprises have been reluctant to adopt solid-state disk drive (SSD) technology, worried about a variety of issues such as quality of service with write performance, overall product durability, and high cost. This comes at a time when industry researcher Enterprise Strategy Group reports that a survey of enterprise IT managers indicates that 47 percent think SSDs are too expensive when compared to hard-disk drives and 48 percent say that they are not interested because SSDs have either limited drive capacity or no applications where flash makes sense. Another 19 percent say they're worried about reliability and longevity when it comes to flash-based SSDs.

A new vendor SandForce recently emerged from stealth mode to unveil the SF-1000 SSD Processor Family, a replacement for conventional storage controllers that it says will address enterprise concerns about flash SSD endurance, reliability, and data retention.

Other suppliers have tried to answer enterprise flash SSD challenges by focusing on product buildouts at lower geometries in order to reduce production (and therefore retail) costs. They've also incorporated wear-leveling algorithms to extend flash SSD lifespans and are using integrated, automated storage management to reserve solid-state disk for high-demand processing and spreading the work of the enterprise over a mix of solid-state and hard-drive devices so as to utilize "best choice" storage media.

"There's both fear and trepidation in the minds of enterprise storage managers when it comes to moving from hard drives to SSDs," says Jim Handy, semiconductor analyst for research firm Objective Analysis. "A transition to solid state technology is made that much easier if these managers can just do a one-to-one replacement of a hard drive with an SSD. It is easy to see how SSD performs in this context, and to make a decision as to whether SSD is providing value or it isn't. If you do this on a small scale, you can plug in one SSD and replace three hard drives, and you'll see a modest improvement with two empty hard drive slots."

Page:   1   2   3   4  Next  »

Add Your Comment:

Premium Content

Risk Intolerant: Defense in Depth And the Rise of Data Loss Prevention

Security pros continue to move from protecting systems to protecting data, and it's about time. Attackers are getting smarter, and complex new applications make repelling them ever harder. Technologies like data loss prevention, or DLP, purport to help. Here's what you need to know about this emerging discipline.

Don't Stop At VoIP
June 2010

Network Computing June 2010


Salary

Video