Intel X25-M, beats HDD on all levels except price

Intel X25-M, beats HDD on all levels except price
Rating
Overall:

Incredibly fast and silent, too, but solid-state is still far too expensive for the mainstream.

Performance:
6
Features & Design:
5
Value for money:
1

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Price
Price: $997
> Pricing info
Specs
Price 997
Capacity 80Gb, 160GB SSD
Dimensions 2.5"
> View full specs
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Solid-state drives (SSDs) are becoming a regular option for laptops and netbooks – one recent example being the Asus Eee PC S101. But to date, there’s been scant opportunity to buy one without a laptop attached.

Now, Intel is launching a range of standalone consumer SSDs headed up by this 2.5in SATA unit, available in 80GB and 160GB models.

There’s also a 1.8in model, variations supporting IDE and USB, and an X25-E model for server use.

SSDs can transfer data far more quickly than traditional platter-based drives. With no need to spin up or seek, the X25-M claims a read latency of just 85microseconds. That’s orders of magnitude faster than the 4ms of our A-Listed desktop drive, the 1TB Samsung SpinPoint FDT.

Sustained transfers are lightning-fast, too: in our tests, the X25-M’s ten-channel parallel architecture helped it achieve an average read speed of 226MB/s – nearly twice the Samsung’s maximum 124MB/s.

And while regular drives lose speed when files are fragmented or located at the outer edge of the platter, SSDs give you full speed all the time.

Our test system, based on an Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9650, achieved a benchmark score of 1.65 with a 10,000 RPM Western Digital Raptor as its system drive. Switching to the SSD increased this to 1.80.

There are other benefits, too. The SSD is completely silent, and should be more reliable than a traditional drive. Intel promises a mean time between failures of 1.2 million hours, twice what Samsung claims for its SpinPoint range. Drives can be smaller, too: Intel has stuck to standard form factors, but the 2.5in drive is just 6mm deep.

As a final bonus, power consumption is tiny, drawing less than a watt even under heavy use. Some mainstream desktop drives suck up as much as 9W. The big catch is the price.

The 80GB model costs a jaw-dropping $997. That’s impossible for the average PC user to justify, and relegates the drive firmly to the realms of specialist applications.

But chip prices are always falling, and the X25-M is a hugely encouraging glimpse at the future of PC storage. Once prices reach mainstream levels, we’ll be first in the queue.

This Review appeared in the February, 2009 issue of PC & Tech Authority Magazine

Source: Copyright © PC Pro, Dennis Publishing

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See more about:  intel  |  x25m  |  solidstate  |  hard  |  disk  |  drive  |  ssd
 
 

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