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Data Storage Hardware Technology

Toshiba Introduces New Tiny NVMe SSD Form Factor (anandtech.com) 61

At the Flash Memory Summit today, Toshiba introduced a new form factor for NVMe SSDs that is small enough to be a removable alternative to soldered-down BGA SSDs. "The new XFMEXPRESS form factor allows for two or four PCIe lanes while taking up much less space than even the smallest M.2 22x30mm card size," reports AnandTech. "The XFMEXPRESS card size is 18x14x1.4mm, slightly larger and thicker than a microSD card. It mounts into a latching socket that increases the footprint up to 22.2x17.75x2.2mm." From the report: XFMEXPRESS is intended to bring the benefits of replaceable storage to devices that would normally be stuck with soldered BGA SSDs or eMMC and UFS modules. For consumer devices this opens the way for aftermarket capacity upgrades, and for embedded devices that need to be serviceable this can permit smaller overall dimensions. Device manufacturers also get a bit of supply chain flexibility since storage capacity can be adjusted later in the assembly process. XFMEXPRESS is not intended to be used as an externally-accessible slot like SD cards; swapping out an XFMEXPRESS SSD will require opening up the case of the device it's installed in, though unlike M.2 SSDs the XFMEXPRESS socket and retention mechanism itself is tool-less.

XFMEXPRESS will allow for similar performance to BGA SSDs. The PCIe x4 host interface will generally not be the bottleneck, especially in the near future when BGA SSDs start adopting PCIe gen4, which the XFMEXPRESS connector can support. Instead, SSDs in these small form factors are often thermally limited, and the XFMEXPRESS connector was designed to allow for easy heat dissipation with a metal lid that can serve as a heatspreader.

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Toshiba Introduces New Tiny NVMe SSD Form Factor

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  • you need an amd epyc drive all the lanes with 1 cpu

  • by Dwedit ( 232252 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @05:47PM (#59053900) Homepage

    Everyone who's ever broken off a locking tab that secures a tiny, flat ribbon cable, raise your hand. That's what this reminds me of. It seems like it would be really easy to accidentally break this when trying to get the card in or out.

    • *raises hand*

      I think this might not suffer the same problem though. With those stupid locking tabs you're dealing with a tiny, high-friction tab that you pretty much have to manipulate with a screwdriver or similar lever, while trying to avoid applying force at the wrong angle, or overshooting the stopping angle when the friction suddenly halves as the tab starts moving.

      This looks like the lever/cover itself will be over 1cm wide and almost as long, with two connection points on the hinge, and will be held

    • Now raise your hand if you've broken something replacing a BGA component on a motherboard.
      These aren't designed to be user replaceable but rather more easily serviceable. Ironically I've probably unplugged more ribbon cables in the past 9 months than I have disconnected SATA cables.

  • This I suspect is the target customer.

    They will won't use it.

  • Take a look at the images in TFA. With an empty XFMEXPRESS socket how long until some of those metal fingers start shorting out the PCI bus on the sliding metal cover?
  • There are already several small form factors for SSDs, including M.2, and there are plenty of those. From wikipedia: " The M.2 standard allows module widths of 12, 16, 22 and 30 mm, and lengths of 16, 26, 30, 38, 42, 60, 80 and 110 mm" that's the nice thing about standard, there are so many to chose from !
    Last year I wanted an SSD for the 2nd slot of my 2 year old laptop. I could NOT find a new SSD at the correct form factor. I had to scour ebay for a used one. So 'they' don't even produce the things they

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