Thursday, October 20th 2011

OCZ Announces Indilinx Everest-powered Octane SATA SSD Family

OCZ Technology Group, Inc., a leading provider of high-performance solid-state drives (SSDs), today launched the Indilinx Everest-based Octane SATA 3.0 and SATA 2.0 SSD series, striking the ideal balance between capacity, physical size, and speed. In addition to being the world's first SSD to achieve up to a 1TB capacity in a compact 2.5 inch format, OCZ's Octane SSD series combines high-speed data transfer rates with record-breaking access times to provide a superior user experience and improved application performance.

"OCZ has reached an important milestone in the development of its own controller technology," said James E. Bagley, Senior Analyst with Storage Strategies NOW. "The high sustained performance, even with compressed files, the rapid boot feature and high access speeds using SATA 3.0 protocol puts their controller technology in the major league."
"Until now SSDs have been tailored for specific applications, forcing users into a product which maximizes performance for a narrow band of applications, but is significantly lacking in others," said Ryan Petersen, CEO of OCZ Technology. "The Octane Series solves this problem by providing the highest level of performance across varied workloads including mixed file sizes and mixed compressible and uncompressible data, all while nearly doubling NAND flash endurance."
The Octane series leverages the cutting-edge Indilinx Everest platform to deliver up to 560MB/s of bandwidth and 45,000 IOPS and is optimized for the complete spectrum of file types and sizes. In particular, the Octane's proprietary page mapping algorithms allow for steady mixed-workload performance, mirroring real world conditions across a wide range of applications. The Octane series also includes a number of advanced features unique to Indilinx, including innovative latency reduction technology, enabling both read and write access times as low as 0.06ms and 0.09ms respectively, the lowest of any commercially available SSD. This enhances application responsiveness and enables features such as "fast boot" in consumer applications.

Octane SSDs also come equipped with Indilinx's proprietary NDurance technology, increasing the lifespan of the NAND flash memory, ensuring the most consistent and reliable performance as well as minimizing performance degradation even after the drive's storage capacity is highly utilized. In addition, Octane series drives support AES and automatic encryption to secure critical data.

Octane Product Features:
  • Dual Core CPU
  • Up to 512MB DRAM cache
  • 128GB, 256GB, 512GB, and 1TB models
  • High sequential speeds:
    o Octane (SATA 6 Gbps) Read: 560MB/s; Write: 400MB/s
    o Octane-S2 (SATA 2.0) Read: 275MB/s; Write: 265MB/s
  • High transactional performance - Optimized for 4K to 16K compressed files
    o Octane (SATA 6 Gbps) 45,000 random read 4K IOPS
    o Octane-S2 (SATA 3 Gbps) 30,000 random read 4K IOPS
  • Industry-low latency:
    o Read: 0.06ms; Write: 0.09ms
  • Strong performance at low queue depths (QD 1 - 3)
  • Up to 8 channels with up to 16-way Interleaving
  • Advanced BCH ECC engine enabling more than 70 bits correction capability per 1KB of data
  • Proprietary NDurance Technology: increases NAND life up to 2X of the rated P/E cycles
  • Efficient NAND Flash management: Dynamic and static wear-leveling, and background garbage collection
  • Boot time reduction optimizations
  • NCQ support up to 32 queue depth
  • End-to-end data protection
  • TRIM support
  • Industry standard SMART reporting
The OCZ Octane SSD Series will be available November 1st in models ranging from 128GB-1TB capacities throughout OCZ's global channel.
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18 Comments on OCZ Announces Indilinx Everest-powered Octane SATA SSD Family

#1
Completely Bonkers
Looks like a great drive and those prices are very competitive! ;)
striking the ideal balance between capacity, physical size, and speed
Well, that's nonsense to say that a bigger capacity size is going to be slower. Or physically bigger. Or a bigger size is going to be faster... etc.

It reminds me of a vodafone salesgirl in the 1990's who told me my new motorola can't have the same functionality as my old one because it was smaller, and they can't fit all the features inside. Well... you just can't argue with that... you just have to walk away before you waste energy and time.
Posted on Reply
#2
Kantastic
I believe this is the first controller Indilinx has released after OCZ bought them out? I wonder how the write amp compares to SF.
Posted on Reply
#3
mrw1986
Completely BonkersLooks like a great drive and those prices are very competitive! ;)
Where do you see the prices? Perhaps I am missing something...
Posted on Reply
#4
Jegergrim
Where can we see the prices on these? Looks very interesting. Price comparison to e.g. Corsair Force GT 120gb?
Posted on Reply
#5
W1zzard
i hear $1.10 to $1.30 per gb price point
Posted on Reply
#6
n-ster
W1zzardi hear $1.10 to $1.30 per gb price point
That means, if this is true, specials will easily hit 1$/GB, this is awesome!
Posted on Reply
#7
mrw1986
W1zzardi hear $1.10 to $1.30 per gb price point
Wow W1zz, that would be insane. I sure hope you're right!
Posted on Reply
#8
boogerlad
write amplification should be on par with intel solutions now, because with barefoot, they were only slightly behind.
Posted on Reply
#9
Static~Charge
Item description: OCZ Octane 1TB SSD

Cost: One arm & one leg
Posted on Reply
#10
Kantastic
Static~ChargeItem description: OCZ Octane 1TB SSD

Cost: One arm & one leg
An arm and a leg is cheap compared to an entire array of human organs it used to cost.
Posted on Reply
#11
lyndonguitar
I play games
holycow. 1 TB SSD

HOLY COW

HOLY COW
Posted on Reply
#12
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
In all likelihood, higher capacity models will be closer to $1.1/GB, the lower capacity ones closer to $1.3/GB. Price/GB and capacity are often inversely proportional.
Posted on Reply
#13
Jegergrim
Since I live in Scandinavia, could any one of you compare price per GB to e.g. a corsair force GT ? Thanks in advance :)
Posted on Reply
#14
n-ster
btarunrIn all likelihood, higher capacity models will be closer to $1.1/GB, the lower capacity ones closer to $1.3/GB. Price/GB and capacity are often inversely proportional.
Yea :( I do hope that the 128GB ends up being on special at 149.99$ sometimes
Posted on Reply
#15
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
n-sterYea :( I do hope that the 128GB ends up being on special at 149.99$ sometimes
$167 isn't that bad for a 128 GB drive (128 GB @ $1.3/GB). A couple of years ago, 64 GB drives cost that much.
Posted on Reply
#16
n-ster
btarunr$167 isn't that bad for a 128 GB drive (128 GB @ $1.3/GB). A couple of years ago, 64 GB drives cost that much.
Yea, I bought my Vertex 2 50GB and 60GB when they were 200$ ea lol
Posted on Reply
#17
1c3d0g
If they can make it as stable as a Crucial m4, then we have another great competitor. If it's BSOD-prone, bug-ridden like SandForce, it'll be just another fast controller on paper, nothing more. :)
Posted on Reply
#18
n-ster
Imagine if it were as reliable as Intel SSD :eek:
Posted on Reply
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