Wednesday, March 10th 2010

OCZ Technology Makes Solid State Storage Affordable with Onyx SSDs

OCZ Technology Group, Inc., a worldwide leader in innovative, ultra-high performance and high reliability memory and flash-based storage as an alternative to hard disk drives (HDDs), today unveiled the OCZ Onyx SATA II 2.5" Solid State Drive (SSD) Series, an ultra-affordable MultiLevel Cell (MLC)-based solid state storage solution designed for consumers looking to take advantage of flash-based storage technology. Offering a faster and more durable alternative to traditional hard drives in a cost-efficient SSD, the Onyx delivers reliable performance without the high price normally associated with SSD drives.

"As new technologies become available, OCZ continues to expand both our enterprise and consumer SSD lines, and one of our goals is to make SSDs more affordable to end-users. Our new Onyx series SSD does exactly that and is a perfect solution for netbooks, laptops, or home desktop PCs," commented Ryan Petersen, CEO of the OCZ Technology Group. "Designed to offer the best of both worlds, the new OCZ Onyx SSD delivers the speed and reliability of solid state storage to mainstream consumers at an aggressive price point that makes the technology more accessible to customers who want to take advantage of all the benefits of the SSDs without incurring the high cost normally associated with the solution."
With a sub 100 dollar MRSP the aggressively priced Onyx 32GB SSD delivers an enhanced computing experience with faster application loading, snappier data access, shorter boot-ups, and longer battery life. Onyx SSDs feature HDD-dominating access times, up to 125MB/s read and 70MB/s write speeds, 64MB of onboard cache, and unique performance optimization to keep the drives at peak performance over the long term.

OCZ Onyx SSD drives feature a durable yet lightweight housing, and because OCZ SSDs have no moving parts, the drives are more rugged than conventional hard drives. Available first in 32GB capacity the Onyx state drives are ideal for use as a boot up drive or for mobile PCs and Netbooks as a quality hard drive replacement. Designed for ultimate reliability, Onyx SSDs have an excellent 1.5 million hour mean time between failure (MTBF), and OCZ also offers a leading 3-year warranty and award-winning technical support with the series, making SSDs a more viable upgrade for users requiring ultimate levels of customer service.
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52 Comments on OCZ Technology Makes Solid State Storage Affordable with Onyx SSDs

#51
TIGR
EsseYes but like large HDD's used to be, they're rather 'fresh' and not actually mainstream yet. Large HDD's are cheap because users made them cheap by buying them year after year, materials are in much larger quantities. I wouldn't even say SSD's and HDD's should be competing at all because they're opposites, one is for speed the other is for storage.

They're not even that expensive to be honest, from a storage point of view they're horrendous but when you have the option to increase the slowest device (and only moving part) in your computer for less than a new GPU or CPU its just another cost that you go with (this is going on my local prices). I'm surprised you guys don't complain about RAM modules, now those are expensive!
Everything has to be considered in context; I didn't complain about or refuse to buy the early hard drives because there was no cheaper alternative. Today, with SSDs, there is a cheaper alternative, and the cheaper alternative (HDDs) doesn't slow me down in a way that matters. Thanks to all the buffers, cache, system and video memory in today's computers, there's nothing I can't do because I have HDDs instead of SSDs. If I had too slow of a GPU, I couldn't play certain games; too slow a CPU and I wouldn't be able to watch HD movies. But HDDs don't restrict me from doing anything; they just make loading times a little longer.

Buying a $3-4/GB SSD to speed up load times, is like buying a Ferrari to get to the grocery store faster. It was only a five minute trip in the first place; now it's 3 minutes. So you spend $250k to make trips that were already quick, even quicker. It doesn't help with the long trips (big file transfers); you can make those trips faster for less (with RAID). And if you wait a couple years, you can get something a few times faster your Ferrari for a fraction of the price. However: just driving that high-end pasta rocket is a blast. This I recognize and if you want to pay the price for that ride, more power to you.

I'm glad there are people who buy $3+/GB SSDs. I've used them myself in a few dozen builds for customers, and am grateful for the purchases of those people—their support of the SSD manufacturers will ultimately bring the cost of SSDs down to the point where people like me will buy them and benefit from their investment. Everyone wins; the early adopters pay big bucks for the rush, the technology gets developed, refined, and becomes economical, and then mainstream users who are more patient get to use it.

I just wouldn't try arguing for SSDs being a wise investment right now—not even for those who need extreme performance. Just for those who need extremely fast load times. :D
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#52
Thrackan
When you use a Ferrari to get to the grocery shop, just make sure you get one with a trunk :D
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