Toshiba, Samsung in race to ship 256GB solid-state

Like Samsung, Micron, and Intel, Toshiba is using multi-level cell (MLC) technology in its high-capacity drives. An MLC memory cell structure allows drive makers to build larger capacity drives at lower cost but it is not as fast as single-level cell (SLC), nor inherently as reliable. (SLC solid state drives are used currently in laptops such as the Apple MacBook Air and ThinkPad X300.)

Another nail in the hard-disk-drive coffin? Well, not quite. But Toshiba’s drive rivals magnetic drives in size while delivering better performance.

(Credit:
Toshiba)

Toshiba has plenty of other company in the high-capacity SSD market, too. Intel says it will ship a 160GB SSD in the fourth quarter, and Micron has stated that it plans to have a 256GB SSD in the same time frame. STEC already ships drives in this capacity.

Dell, to date, has used mostly Samsung SSDs, as has Apple. Dell has said in the past that in tests of an SSD in a Latitude notebook, it saw a 35 percent overall system performance increase over a standard 2.5-inch 5400rpm notebook hard drive–the type of hard disk drive used in ultraportable notebooks today.

Solid-state drives are more expensive than hard-disk drives but are also generally more power efficient and faster.

Toshiba will begin shipping a 256GB solid-state drive, matching Samsung, its bigger, badder rival.

And the two companies are duking it out in more ways than this: both are also vying for SanDisk, the largest maker of retail flash memory drives.

Toshiba is trying to keep pace with the 800-pound SSD gorilla, South Korea-based Samsung. Samsung is the largest flash memory chip supplier in the world and has stated in the past that it would sample a 256GB SSD in September. Toshiba is ranked No. 2.

No pricing was given.

Samples of Toshiba’s 2.5-inch SSD are available now, with mass production following in the fourth quarter, the company said. SSDs currently come in two sizes: smaller 1.8-inch form factors and slightly larger 2.5-inch designs.

Toshiba, like Samsung, says it has developed a controller chip that mitigates the shortcomings of MLC. The “MLC controller…achieves higher read-write speeds, parallel data transfers, and wear leveling,” the company said. Wear leveling reduces the “pounding” on one spot–that could wear out the cell–by spreading out the writes over many different cells.

The Toshiba drive delivers a maximum read speed of 120MB per second and maximum write speed of 70MB per second using a high-speed SATA 3-gigabit-per-second interface.

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.