Wednesday, March 11th 2009

A-DATA's New 2.5-inch SSD 300 Plus to Offer 250 MB/sec, 160 MB/sec Transfer Speeds

A-DATA Technology, a worldwide leader in high-performance RAM products and Data Storage, announced today its new 2.5-inch SATA 3.0Gbps SSD 300 Plus, a next generation solid-state drive with performance significantly increased. Adopting some latest SSD controller design with 64 MB SDRAM of data buffer, the new 300 Plus SSD is able to read data at 250 MB/sec and write at 160 MB/sec. A-DATA will ship 32 GB, 64 GB, 128 GB and 256 GB models of the drives, sometime this year.
Source: SlashGear
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16 Comments on A-DATA's New 2.5-inch SSD 300 Plus to Offer 250 MB/sec, 160 MB/sec Transfer Speeds

#1
AlCabone
And the world moves forward
Posted on Reply
#2
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
AlCaboneAnd the world moves forward
in a very slow manner. other brands have already announced drives with these exact specs.
Posted on Reply
#3
Homeless
I hate ssd news w/o prices
Posted on Reply
#4
wolf
Performance Enthusiast
if we were to introduce an alien humainoid species to earth they would be integrated properly before DDR3 and SSD's :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#5
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
wolfif we were to introduce an alien humainoid species to earth they would be integrated properly before DDR3 and SSD's :laugh:
sig worthy.
Posted on Reply
#6
Hayder_Master
Musselsin a very slow manner. other brands have already announced drives with these exact specs.
nice new avatar :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#10
jothy
Actually the best would probably have to be the Intel X25-E. Vertex looks good though as it is much cheaper (mlc) and still performs well.
Posted on Reply
#11
BOSE
Whats up with the slow write speeds on all of these SSD cards?
Posted on Reply
#12
crazy pyro
They're not meant to have insane write times, only read times.
Posted on Reply
#13
BOSE
But why arent they meant to have insane write times? It would be more practical to have write speeds just as fast as read speeds.
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#14
crazy pyro
I've not understood that bit yet, it's that the design simply doesn't allow it.
Posted on Reply
#15
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
MLC drives have to wipe the entire chip and re-write all data on that chip, to enter anything new. SLC drives dont have to do this, and thats why they have higher write speeds.
Posted on Reply
#16
wolf
Performance Enthusiast
Musselssig worthy.
took your advice :p
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