Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Intel Hardware News Technology Science

Samsung Starts Mass Producing New 512GB NVMe SSD That's Smaller Than a Stamp (pcworld.com) 75

An anonymous reader writes from a report via PCWorld: Samsung announced late Monday night that it has begun mass producing a new SSD that is tinier than a postage stamp. PCWorld reports: "The PM971-NVMe fits up to 512GB of NAND flash, a controller, and RAM into a single BGA chip measuring 20mm x 16mm x 1.5mm and weighing just one gram, the company said. Samsung says the PM971-NVMe will hit 1.5GBps read speeds and 800MBps write speeds. The PM971-NVMe is built using 20nm NAND chips and includes 4GB of LPDDR4 RAM as a cache. The NAND is triple-level cell but uses a portion as a write butter. The drive will come in 512GB, 256GB and 128GB capacities." While on the topic of hardware, Intel unveiled its Broadwell-E family, which consists of an "Extreme Edition" Core i7 chipset that has 10 cores and 20 threads.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Samsung Starts Mass Producing New 512GB NVMe SSD That's Smaller Than a Stamp

Comments Filter:
  • by __aaclcg7560 ( 824291 ) on Tuesday May 31, 2016 @04:31PM (#52221127)
    If the new stamp-sized SSDs are priced like stamps, I'll take a whole book.
  • The NAND isn't 20nm (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    The LPDDR4 is 20nm. The NAND is their 48 layer vnand per the linked article. Pretty impressive amount of packaging/die stacking going on there.

    • Fourty-eight layers? Damn. So the NAND is like.... onions? /Shrek

  • by Anonymous Coward

    mmmmmm, write butter....

  • by rholtzjr ( 928771 ) on Tuesday May 31, 2016 @04:42PM (#52221231) Journal
    Mmmm, might want to combine that with the read toast to compliment the write butter.
  • by Nutria ( 679911 ) on Tuesday May 31, 2016 @04:44PM (#52221249)

    It would cost a small fortune, but you could easily fit 50TB or more of data in a 1" x 3.5" HDD form factor.

    • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

      Heat?

      They would probably burn pretty hot, but yes, the possibilities are rather startling. It will be an interesting day when SSDs overtake HDDs on practical metrics such as data density, and even more so on price.

      Any predictions on when that is going to happen?

      • by Nutria ( 679911 )

        Heat?

        Good point. Could you stack two layers separated by head sinks? You'd obviously need vent holes, though.

        It would give 25TB capacity: 512GB/stamp at 5 stamps wide, 5 stamps deep (need some room for control & power circuits) and two layers high.

        when SSDs overtake HDDs on practical metrics such as data density

        I think that day has arrived.

        and even more so on price.

        5 years?

        • by jon3k ( 691256 )
          Samsung already made a 15TB SSD [samsung.com] so the demand is presumably there, at least in the enterprise space. Really makes you wonder how much longer spinning disks will be around. 10 years? 20? If Moore's law keeps up, in 20 years we'd have another 13 iterations of Moore's law (lets pretends its not dead now, or by then).

          You can get a 1TB SSD for $255 (or less) today from several real name brand manufacturers. That means after 13 iterations of doubling transistor density, we'd have 8,192TB SSD (someone doub
          • Moore's law cannot continue for another thirteen iterations for a very simple practical reason: It's difficult to make parts smaller than one atom. Atomic spacing for silicon is 0.5nM - that's the absolute, all-you're-getting limit even if every engineering problem is solved.

          • by epine ( 68316 )

            Am I have a bad morning? This thread is making me want to scream. "Moore's law", "5 years?" Anyone else want to pile in with a tired fatuity? Surf's up, apparently, for a tiny value of "surf".

            The following video (from January 2016) contains just about everything worth knowing at this point about Intel's forthcoming phantom memory. Don't even try reading anything else unless you got a bone for chalcogenide chemistry.

            Rick Coulson of Intel on 3D XPoint and NVMe [youtube.com]

            Executive summary: Charge-storage memory is a

        • ...head sinks...

          You mean your head stinks?

      • The density thing happened a long time ago. 3.84TB SFF SSD have been on the market for about a year, with 7.68 due out very soon.

        • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

          Guys, I was asking after "practical density". Of course the chip density is insane, just look at a 256 or 512GB micro SD card!!!!

          There must be some practical issues getting in the way, whether it's heat, interconnects, or just plain dumb cost. However, what I was pondering, was when will we be able to buy a 10TB 3.5" form factor SSD? Just as we can for spinning rust [computerworld.com].

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        They would probably burn pretty hot, but yes, the possibilities are rather startling. It will be an interesting day when SSDs overtake HDDs on practical metrics such as data density, and even more so on price. Any predictions on when that is going to happen?

        There's already 200GB MicroSD cards [bhphotovideo.com] and 16TB 2.5" SSDs [cdw.com] for sale, so I'm pretty sure density is a long won match. Price/GB is another matter, but HDDs don't scale down. I just checked and if you only need 128 GB of space, you pay the same for a HDD as for a SSD. Sure, the HDD will be 500GB but if you don't need it because cloud, streaming etc. you can't save more by buying a smaller HDD. And if you don't want one for a boot drive, you have the budget for a 256GB SSD before SSD+HDD becomes cheaper. I really d

      • Heat?

        They would probably burn pretty hot, but yes, the possibilities are rather startling. It will be an interesting day when SSDs overtake HDDs on practical metrics such as data density, and even more so on price.

        Any predictions on when that is going to happen?

        It has. DARPA. At all length scales, save for the smallest. I apologize for spawning the "thermal via" frenzy of the past few years. Sorry.

  • No new Intel chipset today. A ten-core CPU, though. Actually we've been moving towards smaller, single "chipsets".
    • by JackAxe ( 689361 )
      I'm personally happy Intel didn't go with a new chipset, since my board is a X99. This makes upgrading in the future more affordable.
  • by manu144x ( 3377615 ) on Tuesday May 31, 2016 @05:32PM (#52221569)
    Will the firmware randomly create ads?
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by dinfinity ( 2300094 ) on Tuesday May 31, 2016 @05:57PM (#52221771)

    While on the topic of hardware, Intel unveiled its Broadwell-E family, which consists of an "Extreme Edition" Core i7 chipset that has 10 cores and 20 threads.

    Stop. This. Stupid. Shit. Now.

    • by Qzukk ( 229616 )

      In sort-of related news, the new Windows 10 update will allow you to have big, long filenames on your itty-bitty stamp-sized SSD.

      • In not-quite-but-still-sort-of related news, "the iPod has no wireless and has less space than a Nomad. Lame."

         

      • Presumably so that anyone who hasn't upgraded to Windows 10 will have a good reason to do so if they don't want their software crashing upon encountering long filenames.

  • Zits' Jeremy "What's a stamp?"

    http://zitscomics.com/comics/s... [zitscomics.com]

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

Working...