Fusion-io: 80GB of PCIe-Based SSD
This time for high-end PC users, at $1,000
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on October 6, 2008 at 3:56 pmFusion-io, provider of solid state technology and high-performance I/O solutions, unveiled its first consumer product, the ioXtreme, at the E for All conference and expo. The ioXtreme brings high-end PC users 80 GB of PCI-Express-based, high-performance, solid state storage that was designed for the world’s fastest supercomputers.
"Imagine working on complex 3-D graphics, unzipping and manipulating massive files even installing a new application–all at the same time," said David Flynn, CTO of Fusion-io. "Suddenly, with the ioXtreme, tasks that would have brought your system to its knees are no longer limited by the disks spinning loudly inside your box."
Mechanical disk drive technology, inspired by Edison’s phonograph and originally invented over forty years ago, hasn’t kept up with the performance of today’s PCs. Multi-core CPU’s that perform tens of billions of instructions per second sit needlessly idle waiting for disks to access files. The seemingly endless delays starting applications, manipulating large files or doing just about anything that involves moving data to or from disk can now be a thing of the past. The new memory tier offered with the ioXtreme closes this performance gap, allowing PC users to utilize disk drives for what they do best–providing inexpensive, high-capacity archival storage.
Drawing from Fusion-io’s catalogue of industry leading solid state storage technologies, the ioXtreme adapts some of the company’s most exciting innovations to bring a revolutionary consumer product to the high-performance storage market. With the ioXtreme, extreme PC users get a memory-speed storage device that has been engineered to exponentially accelerate file access and meet their demanding performance needs.
The ioXtreme will be priced at under $1000 and be available for home and consumer use in Q1, 2009.
Comments
The start-up formerly launched a PCIe NAND SSD at $2,400 for 80GB and at $8,900 for 320GB. for enterprise applications and try now to enter into the (high-end) "consumer" market. It also has agreement with HP and IBM.