Bleak Future of SSDs
By Jean-Jacques Maleval, Fri, February 17th, 2012
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The Bleak Future of NAND Flash Memory
By Laura M. Grupp, John D. Davis‡, Steven Swanson, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of California, San Diego, Microsoft Research, Mountain View
In recent years, flash-based SSDs have grown enormously both in capacity and popularity. In high performance enterprise storage applications, accelerating adoption of SSDs is predicated on the ability of manufacturers to deliver performance that far exceeds disks while closing the gap in cost per gigabyte. However, while flash density continues to improve, other metrics such as a reliability, endurance, and performance are all declining. As a result, building larger-capacity flash-based SSDs that are reliable enough to be useful in enterprise settings and high-performance enough to justify their cost will become challenging.
The Bleak Future of NAND Flash Memory
By Laura M. Grupp, John D. Davis‡, Steven Swanson, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of California, San Diego, Microsoft Research, Mountain View
In recent years, flash-based SSDs have grown enormously both in capacity and popularity. In high performance enterprise storage applications, accelerating adoption of SSDs is predicated on the ability of manufacturers to deliver performance that far exceeds disks while closing the gap in cost per gigabyte. However, while flash density continues to improve, other metrics such as a reliability, endurance, and performance are all declining. As a result, building larger-capacity flash-based SSDs that are reliable enough to be useful in enterprise settings and high-performance enough to justify their cost will become challenging.
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