ANTenna Blog -- How-To
For Servers, The Future is Solid State Drives
Posted by Lamont Wood Thursday, Jul 3, 2008, 09:23 AM ET
Judging from recent vendor announcements, the future of server storage is clearly solid-state drives. But don't expect mechanical drives to simply go away.
Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems, and EMC have all done it—announced solid-state drives (SSDs) for their server lines. HP is adopting solid-state storage from Fusion-io. Sun announced it will release a 32GB SSD later this year and make flash storage an option for most of its server line. EMC made a similar move earlier this year for its enterprise-level storage.
Of course, SSD storage remains more expensive than mechanical storage. Price comparisons vary, but it seems fair to say that the cost of mechanical storage is dimes per gigabyte, while the price for solid-state flash storage is dollars per gigabyte, or a factor of between 10 and 20 more expensive. But the performance of SSD is so superior that an astute buyer should consider solid-state flash drives for any but low-end servers.
A Sun executive was quoted as saying that a 32 GB flash drive enabled about 5,000 write and 30,000 read operations per second, as opposed to about 180 write and 320 read operations per second on a mechanical drive spinning at 15,000 RPM -- an improvement factor of 28 and 94 respectively. For server use, where I/O speed is critical, the performance differential clearly outweighs the price differential.
Meanwhile, thanks to volume production of solid-state storage for consumer products such as cell phones and MP3 players, the cost of flash storage per byte has been falling at 50% to 70% yearly. The end result is that pundits are predicting that magnetic and optical storage will begin to fade away even in the desktop market, to be replaced by flash memory. That may be true at the high end, but elsewhere mechanical drives are surely too cheap and familiar to fade away any time in the next decade. And they're superior for backup, since a ghost of the data survives on the platter even if the drive fries.
Sun also noted SSD energy consumption is about one-fifth that of mechanical disks and even RAM. With all the current talk of locating data centers in Siberia or Iceland simply to avoid paying for air conditioning, the advent of inexpensive solid-state drives could help ease the data center energy crisis.
Go to the bMighty Server How-To Center
This is a public forum. CMP Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. CMP Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.
Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of CMP Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in CMP Media's Terms of Service.
Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.
- Phone Systems Guide - What kind of phone system is right for your business
- Web Design Guide - What to look for in a Web designer
- Merchant Services Guide - Credit card processing and more
- Online Marketing Guide - Leverage the Net to market your business
- Alternative Financing Guide - How to find the cash your business needs
- View all guides
Explore ANTenna Blog
Most Recent Posts
- Kaspersky Labs Introduces Mac Security Package
- Review Roundup: The Droid Delivers The Goods
- Top 3 Ways For SMBs To Cut Tech Costs?
- Strip And Crimp: Cut Costs By Cutting Your Own Cables
- New Ways To Run Windows On Your Macs
ANTenna Blog Topics
- Apple
- Backup
- bMighty
- Business & E-Business
- Business Continuity
- Cloud Computing
- Company Size: 1,100-1,500
- Company Size: 250-999
- Company Size: 50-249
- Company Size: 1-49
- Disaster Recovery
- Economics
- Education
- Entrepreneurs
- Finance/Accounting
- Finance/Banking/Insurance
- Government
- Green Business
- Hardware & Software
- Healthcare
- Hospitality
- How-To
- HR
- Imaging How-To
- International
- Internet/Web
- iPhone
- IT
- Linux
- Management
- Manufacturing/Mining
- Messaging
- Mobile
- Networking & Communications
- Non-Profit
- Open Source
- Operations
- Piracy
- Printers/Printing
- Professional/Creative Services
- Retail
- Unified Communications
- Sales/Marketing
- Start-Ups
- Security
- Server How-To
- Services
- Social Networking
- Software-as-a-Service
- Storage
- Strategy/Analysis/Biz Dev
- Technology/Telecom
- The rANT
- Transportation
- Travel
- Windows
- Web 2.0
- Women in Business
ANTenna Bloggers
ANTenna Blog Roll
- ANTenna Archive
- Ars Technica
- Business Know-How
- ChannelWeb Hot Topics
- ChannelWeb The Chart
- Datamation
- Duct Tape Marketing
- The Entrepreneurial Mind
- Freakonomics
- GigaOmNet
- Guy Kawasaki
- Inc.com
- IT Organization Management
- IT Manager's Journal
- IT Toolbox
- LifeHacker
- Mashable
- MonkeyBrains
- Network Computing Blog
- Scott Berkun
- Search Engine Land
- Search Engine Watch
- SmallBizResource
- SmallBizTechnology.com
- SmallBusinessHub
- Small Business Trends
- TechCrunch
- Technologizer
- Tech Republic
- The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs
- USA Today Small Biz Connection
- Valleywag
- Walt Mossberg Feed - All Things Digital
- Web Worker Daily
- WorkHappy.net
- WSJ's Business Technology
bMighty email newsletter!
Browse by Category
bMighty Tech
Term Of Day:
Boost your tech
vocabulary!
bMighty's SMB
TechEncyclopedia
defines more than
20,000 IT terms.
FREE Technology Services Locator!
Search our database of 200,000 solution- provider locations by business activity, technology, vertical market, and customer size. Find a technology partner NOW.
go




