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The SSD 310, Intel's first mSATA drive was released in December 2010, providing X25-M G2 performance in a much smaller package. [12] [13] March 2011 saw the introduction of two new SSD lines from Intel. The first, the SSD 510, used an SATA 6 Gigabit per second interface to reach speeds of up to 500 MB/s. [14]
SSDs may support various logical interfaces, which define the command sets used by operating systems to communicate with the SSD. Two common logical interfaces include: Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI): Initially designed for HDDs, AHCI is commonly used with SATA SSDs but is less efficient for modern SSDs due to its overhead.
LSI sold its Nytro SSD business to Seagate No Formerly through its subsidiary SandForce, but it sold SandForce to Seagate Memoright [20] Taiwan No No Yes No No Micro Center [21] United States No No Yes, but uses its Inland house brand instead of the Micro Center brand No No Micron Technology [22] United States No Yes Yes No Yes Microsemi [23]
Western Digital WD740GD A Fujitsu laptop drive (80 GB, 7,200 RPM) on the left and a Western Digital VelociRaptor (300 GB, 10,000 RPM). The Western Digital Raptor (often marketed as WD Raptor, 2.5" models known as VelociRaptor) is a discontinued series of high performance hard disk drives produced by Western Digital first marketed in 2003.
On 12 May 2008 G.SKILL announced its first SATA II 2.5" solid-state drives (SSDs) with 32 GB or 64 GB of capacity. [ 11 ] On 22 October 2014 G.SKILL released its first Extreme Performance Phoenix Blade Series 480 GB PCIe 2.0 x8 SSD using MLC NAND capable of maximum read and write speeds up to 2,000 MB per second and 245K IOPS.
As of 2020, SSDs started to compete with HDDs. As of January 2024, the largest hard drive is 32 TB (while SSDs can be much bigger at 100 TB, mainstream consumer SSDs cap at 8 TB). [7] Smaller, 2.5-inch drives, are available at up to 2 TB for laptops, and 6 TB as external drives.
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