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Samsung, Sun develop new flash memory device

Dubai, July 22, 2008

Samsung Electronics has collaborated with Sun Microsystems to develop a single-level-cell NAND flash memory device for use in solid state drives.

It offers much higher endurance levels than any other flash memory device on the market today, said a Samsung statement.
 
Probable applications for the new ultra-endurance SLC flash include its use in video streaming, high-transaction data processing, search engine operations and other high-speed server functions, said the statement.

Offering a five-fold increase in data write-and-erase cycles over standard SLC flash memory, Samsung’s new server-grade SLC NAND memory is designed to be used in SSDs to greatly extend the lifecycle of any high-transaction data processing server. It is expected to deliver the highest endurance ever offered in 24/7 mission-critical computing. 
 
The ultra-endurance server-grade memory has been developed in close cooperation with Sun over the past several months, it said.
 
Samsung said that its server-grade SLC memory will provide a 100X increase over conventional hard drives, in the number of data transfers (input/output per second or I/OPS) per watt, registering a substantial power savings in a market sector where rising cooling bills are being watched with a great deal of concern.
           
"We have been working with Sun to develop this new 8GB server-grade SLC flash memory, which will give IT managers the best in high-density, high-endurance memory design with markedly less energy consumption than we see today," said Madhav Narayan, general manager of IT division at Samsung Gulf Electronics.  "'Endurance up, power down' is going to be the mantra of IT innovators at enterprises everywhere, and server grade SLC flash is ideally situated to deliver on that equation."

"Sun sees incredible upside to using server grade SLC NAND flash to accelerate customers' applications, and we plan to incorporate this technology into our line of servers and storage," said Michael Cornwell, lead technologist for flash memory, Sun Microsystems. "Flash SSDs of this quality and performance when included in our systems and Open Storage products with Solaris ZFS will revolutionise the hardware marketplace. We are excited to be working closely with Samsung to lead this game-changing technology revolution."
 
According to IDC, global demand for enterprise SSDs is expected to rise to 2.24 million units in 2012. -  TradeArabia News Service

 

 




Tags: Samsung | Sun | Flash memory | data processing |

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