Jump to content
Compatible Support Forums
Sign in to follow this  
news

bit-tech News: Intel's X25-E 32GB SSD

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

 

We have just published a review of *Intel's X25-E 32GB SSD*. If you

could post a link on your site that would be very much appreciated.

 

*Link:*

http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2008/12/17/intel-x25-e-32gb-ssd-review/1

 

 

*Picture:*

http://images.bit-tech.net/content_images/2008/12/intel-x25-e-32gb-ssd-review/fp_img.jpg

 

 

*Quote:

*/While still very quick even with the write speeds halved, this

certainly takes a lot away from the X25-E, especially in regards to the

possibility of using it as a boot partition. While the first run through

writing to the disk would be very quick indeed, reusing hard drive space

nullifies the huge write speed performance advantage, making the X25-E

somewhat of a disappointment, especially considering its £505 price tag.

 

The capacity itself is also a real sticking point -- these days 32GB is

nothing in terms of storage, and was barely enough space to install

Windows Vista Home Premium 64-bit and Crysis. While we love the idea of

a fast writing, fast reading drive for use as a boot drive, it needs to

actually be able to fit more than the operating system onto it to make

it a realistic option.

 

In comparison, the MLC based Intel X25-M doesn't suffer from the same

re-write speed problems thanks to MLC using storing data using multiple

states per cell, is more than twice the size at 80GB, costs £50 less,

and has near identical read performance.

 

If you're in the market for a high end SSD we'd certainly still point

you in the direction of the X25-M rather than the X25-E, although for

the majority of you, a high speed 1TB drive will likely meet all your

storage needs and will also be much more wallet friendly -- the

excellent Samsung Spinpoint F1 1TB can be had for as little as £73.

 

Although we love the idea of a fast writing, fast reading, all round

speedy hard drive, the X25-E isn't quite there yet. While write speed

post-format is impressive, re-write speeds are doubled and read speed is

no better than the cheaper, larger mainstream version of the drive.

While we're sure fast writing SSDs like the X25-E will find a place in

highly spe[censored]ed business setups, there's just no way such a small and

ludicrously expensive drive should find a space in your home system,

even if your budget can stretch to it./

*

 

*Cheers guys!

 

Tim Smalley

www.bit-tech.net

 

 

Share this post


Link to post

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×