Fangt schon einmal an zu sparen, denn was Seagate da soeben vorgestellt hat, das duerfte so ziemlich jedes unserer Budgets ordentlich sprengen. Ihr kennt diese Probleme… wohin mit den 12 000 DVDs, die man ueber all die Jahre so angesammelt hat. HDDs sind dafuer einfach zu langsam, denn man will ja schliesslich umgehend auf die Inhalte zugreifen und selbige auch gerne mal hin- und her-kopieren.
Dank Seagate ist das in Zukunft kein Problem mehr, denn die Speicher-Spezialisten haben nun eine 60TB SSD vorgestellt. Ganz genau, das ist kein Schreibfehler hier, sondern inzwischen Realitaet. Bisher galten 15TB als Krone der Massenspeicher-Schoepfung und schwupps vervierfacht Seagate gleich mal die Kapazitaet.
Aber damit nicht genug, denn das Laufwerk ist so angelegt, dass man in Zukunft dann auch auf 100TB upgraden kann, was selbstverstaendlich eher fuer Rechenzentren gedacht ist. Otto Normal User duerfte, auch rein finanziell, erstmal in die Roehre gucken, denn ich kann mir kaum vorstellen, dass diese SSD fuer unter $10 000 zu haben ist. Nicht einmal ansatzweise.
Eine 8TB NVMe SSD soll aber noch dieses Jahr verfuegbar sein und dann ueber einen einzelnen PCIe-Slot betrieben werden koennen.
Preis fuer diese Loesung? Steht ebenfalls in den Sternen, duerfte sich aber so im Bereich von unter $5000 bewegen.
60TB SAS SSD, 8TB NVMe SSD New Additions to Expanding Portfolio Addressing Diverse Data Center Needs
CUPERTINO, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Seagate Technology plc (NASDAQ:STX) announced today at the Flash Memory Summit conference two new flash innovations that extend the limits of storage computing performance in enterprise data centers to unprecedented levels. The new products include a 60 terabyte (TB) Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) solid-state-drive (SSD) — the largest SSD ever demonstrated — and the 8TB Nytro® XP7200 NVMe SSD. These two new products represent the high performance end of Seagate’s Enterprise portfolio – a complete ecosystem of HDD, SSD and storage system products designed to help customers manage the deluge of data they face and move the right data where it’s needed fast to meet rapidly evolving business priorities and market demands.
“The explosion of data can translate into more value for enterprises, if they have the right means to accommodate that data”
The 60TB SAS SSD and 8TB Nytro XP7200 NVMe SSD are the newest additions to Seagate’s data center portfolio and are designed to help enterprise IT leaders obtain more value from the rapidly expanding amount of data they must contend with, even under the most demanding application requirements. The 60TB SAS SSD features twice the density and four times the capacity of the next highest-capacity SSD available today — equivalent to the capacity needed to accommodate 400 million photos on a typical social media platform, or 12,000 DVD movies. This single controller architecture also delivers the lowest cost per gigabyte for flash available today.
The 60TB SAS SSD also simplifies the configuration process of accommodating “hot” and “cold” data, enabling data centers to use the same enterprise HDD 3.5 inch storage form factor. This eliminates the added step of separating out different types of data for near-term availability versus long-term storage — largely based on estimations or best-guesses of future data usage. Instead, data centers can rely on an SSD that helps address their need to quickly accommodate and ensure accessibility of ever-increasing large amounts of data without having to add additional servers or incorporate additional management steps. And, because of the drive’s flexible architecture, it also provides a pathway for data centers to easily grow from the current 60TB capacity to accommodate 100TB of data or more in the future — and all in the same form factor.
Similarly, the 8TB Nytro XP7200 NVMe SSD can accommodate the hyperscale needs of today’s data centers seeking to easily grow with their data without losing the ability to quickly access and process it — a scenario commonly seen in applications involving high performance computing, scale-out databases and big data analytics, such as scientific research and weather modeling. It features a single PCIe interface for high-speed data transfers and four separate controllers, providing processing power up to four times faster than comparable drives, but without the higher cost, power levels and latency required from a PCIe switch or bridge. Applications can process more transactions faster using the industry’s highest bandwidth through one PCIe slot, and without having to invest in more hardware. Additionally, the technology easily integrates into all-flash system arrays.