Yikes, the prices are $800 for the EVO and $1000 for the Pro. I was hoping they would be somewhat less.
Read this today: https://blog.algolia.com/when-solid-state-drives-are-not-that-solid/
Not sure what to make of it.
Seems there is some confirmation of an actual issue here:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/fstrim/+bug/1449005
UPDATE July 17:
We have just finished a conference call with Samsung considering the failure analysis of this issue. Samsung engineering team has been able to successfully reproduce the issue with our latest provided binary.
Samsung had a concrete conclusion that the issue is not related to Samsung SSD or Algolia software but is related to the Linux kernel. Samsung has developed a kernel patch to resolve this issue and the official statement with details will be released tomorrow, July 18 on Linux community with the Linux patch guide. Our testing code is available on GitHub.
I'd be very, very interested in seeing the Linux kernel patch...Looks to be a Linux issue and not Samsung's issue.
The blacklists are generally for devices that misreport capabilities. eg, they say can do function X, but when you try to use function X, it doesn't work according to the agreed contract...I don't know what the trim blacklist is for.
The blacklists are generally for devices that misreport capabilities. eg, they say can do function X, but when you try to use function X, it doesn't work according to the agreed contract...
Yes. Wow. Engineering Heavy Hitters At Work. BIOS Split indeed.
"Caller's responsibility" makes my skin crawl, but I do understand they were trying to provide a highly optimized interface.
Luck of the draw made it appear to be Samsung's problem and not Intel's.
2TB EVO is next week, but the Pro seems to be later. I'd get the EVO, but the high power drain is a concern.
http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-2-5-Inch-Internal-MZ-75E2T0B-AM/dp/B010QD6W9I
http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-2-5-Inch-SATA-Internal-MZ-7KE2T0BW/dp/B010QD6RX4
I'm pretty sure they're going to cost more than $250. :erm:Maybe they'd give me one for the $250 I've been trying to collect from them.
Now Samsung is just messing with us. 15.3TB in 2.5" package.
Woot.com has a 2TB Sandisk SSD for the low, low price of only $1500.Which is as cheap as I've ever seen an SSD that big, refurbished or not.
Judging by the picture, if accurate of course, it is indeed a 2.5" drive. It is not, however, the most interesting deal IMO for a 2TB SSD.
This is.
Anandtech said:Come next year, Samsung will be transitioning the 850 Pro lineup from 2[SUP]nd [/SUP]gen to 3[SUP]rd[/SUP] gen V-NAND, and in the process releasing a 4TB 850 Pro.
My guess is the price of the flagship 4TB model will be more or less the same as what the 2TB model costs now, and the prices of the other capacities will be proportionately less. That should hopefully mean 500GB SSDs will drop under the $100 mark. The entire point of going from 2nd to 3rd generation V-NAND is to decrease the price per GB. I'm really looking forward to where this takes us a few years down the road. 2TB SSDs for ~$100 or under would be great.
Maybe because the NAND will cost about half as much per GB when they move from 2nd to 3rd generation? If not that would leave the flagship 4GB model at around $1500. There won't be too many takers for that price.Why would Samsung drop the price by half within 6 months?
Maybe because the NAND will cost about half as much per GB when they move from 2nd to 3rd generation? If not that would leave the flagship 4GB model at around $1500. There won't be too many takers for that price.
The recent Lenovo servers I've been picking up have their RAID card in them and it plays very well with SSDs in RAID-0, 10, and 50. I don't get all the performance the math would suggest, but it ain't bad.