The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Comments on: Samsung and Sun make 'ultra-endurance' flash chips

Flash + ZFS = Panic @ NetApp 

Posted Friday 18th July 2008 01:08 GMT

Why on earth would you pay their outrageous prices if you have reliable flash and ZFS?

Here's a Jolly Roger of AI Good Reason ..... 

Posted Friday 18th July 2008 07:10 GMT

Pirate

"Why on earth would you pay their outrageous prices if you have reliable flash and ZFS?" ..... By Storage Genius Posted Friday 18th July 2008 01:08 GMT

For Hosting and dDelivery of Future Content/IntelAIgent ProcessOre.... with Earth Payment in Currency $upply.

Five-Fold Increase = 6 Times as Many 

Posted Friday 18th July 2008 09:33 GMT

Thumb Down

There is a difference between 5 times as many and 5 times more - a five-fold increase on 10000 is actually 60000 (10000 increased by 5x10000) but I doubt this is what they mean.

The use of the phrase n times more when what is meant is n times as many really bugs me (yeah, I know) and it seems to be popular in adverts at the moment.

Meanwhile ... 

Posted Friday 18th July 2008 09:49 GMT

... another research team has created NAND flash with 10,000 times number of write cycles as the currently available technology:

http://www.nanowerk.com/news/newsid=6202.php

lies, damn lies, marketing and statistics... 

Posted Friday 18th July 2008 12:36 GMT

The 100x more performance per watt figure is pretty misleading as well since we don't know what the given wattages used are nor do we have any performance numbers to go with them. Still 100x looks pretty impressive on your marketing guff eh?

@Martin 

Posted Friday 18th July 2008 19:34 GMT

Paris Hilton

The server grade SSDs go like the clappers - massively faster access time, but with slightly slower peak read/write speed. Since theres no head to move though, you can read one sector, then write a completely different sector for little cost. That what makes them have such a massively superior IOPS to even a 15k SAS drive, and why they rule for any kind of random access usage, like databases and video archives.

Also, since theres no moving parts, the energy required to operate is much much lower than a mechanical drive, so the 100x performance per watt is probably close to accurate, although I agree that its definately someone in marketing who wanted the '100x' moniker.

Paris, because I hear she can manage an impressive number of I/O per second.

Don’t Miss

NovellNovell grooms NetWare-Linux lovechild

Real-server tools meet fake-server tools

Tape cartridges 75x75What's wrong with tape backup?

Three papers about storage

DellDell opens up on NAS gateways

File access to EqualLogic block arrays

MicronMicron becomes Fusion follower

UPDATE Maybe even Fusion over-taker