Friday, Oct 5th 2007 by Chris Scott Barr


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These days hard drive manufacturers are looking more toward SSD drives, as they are the future. However, a Utah-based company has decided to take a different approach to storage. Would you consider plugging your hard drive directly into a PCIe slot?

ioDrive

Fusion-io has developed what they are calling the ioDrive. This new drive uses a silicon-based storage architecture which they are calling ioMemory. Are you ready for the specs? Their PCIe 4x card has read/write speeds of 800MB/sec and 600MB/sec respectively and 100,000 input/output per second.

The drives will be available in the first quarter of next year in flavors ranging from 80GB all the way up to 640GB. If you have to ask how much it is, you can’t afford it. (For those that still want to know, they’ll be asking around $30 per GB.)

Fusion-io announces 640GB flash card with high data transfer rates
[via pclaunches]

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  1.  James Allan Brady   View all comments by James Allan Brady  Neutral  Add karma Subtract karma Quote

    Gigabyte already came out with something along these lines, it was at the very least the same idea, it was a PCI card (dont think PCIe was out at the time) and you could put up to 4GB of DDR into it and it had a battery on board that would last for like 48 hours so the data wasnt lost, it had some pretty amazing boot times on it too, i think XP from power button to desktop was like 4 or 5 seconds

  2.  Hagrun   View all comments by Hagrun  Neutral  Add karma Subtract karma Quote

    I never saw that gigabyte thing for sale! I wanted to buy one…
    It was very limited and still used the SATA bus. It only used the PCI slot for power. They were said to have had a 2nd version coming out that would support 8 GB of RAM.

    For $30/GB the chick better come with the gadget!


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