There are so few productions that grab fancier purpose similar to solid-state drives have. OCZ has made a well-deserved buzz around the industry since they established their Core 2, Apex, and Vertex multi-layer cell solid-state drive products for retail client. Just they have become one level further, and planned a SLC solid-state drive for the requiring enterprise server part. The OCZ Vertex EX solid-state drive OCZSSDii-OneVTXEX120G into the ranks, and our bandwidth function tries equate the Vertex EX to various other solid-state drives occupying the high-end market.


Function enthusiasts have been maintaining notes on Solid State Drive technology for a moment now. Solid-state drive products are not mainstream, not now, but that day is not so far off anymore. Lower power consumption and heat output are profits of the technology, but they are too the least effective profits any Solid State Drive can provide. The actual payoff is a nearly-instant response time and incredible high-function throughput velocities.


OCZ might not have made the Solid State Drive, but they have finish more to bring solid-state drive technology conventional than any other company in the complete industry. Once solid-state drives could finally outperform their hard disk drive counterpart, the discussion became entire about cost and capacity. The OCZ Core Series helped to

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extend cheap Solid State Drive technology to the masses, but capacity and stuttering became latest issues. Including up to 64MB of Elpida DRAM to the buffer has permanently figured out stuttering trouble, creating raw performance the previous bottleneck. An Indilinx 'Barefoot' inner controller commands the bank of Samsung K9HCG08U1M DRAM examples, permits the OCZ Vertex Series solid-state drive to offer an effective capacity with unmatched function. Benchmark Reviews tests the reaction time and bandwidth function for the Vertex EX SLC SSD against over two dozen other products in this content.


Since first creating a commercial public debut at the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show, Solid State Drives have been a topic of hot treatment between function enthusiasts. These nonvolatile flash storage-based drives characteristic virtually no access time delay and promise a more reliable memory medium with excellent function when functions at a fraction of the power level. Moving into 2008, SSDs became a client reality for many function-minded power users. Just that 2009 has freed promising industry support for Solid State Drive technology, we should desire that conventional acceptance moves quicker than DDRiii SDRAM has.