200TB SSDs on the way

Demon_Skeith

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Memory and data storage producer Micron have begun production and shipment of the world’s first 232-layer NAND in Singapore, which marks the first time a NAND manufacturer has surpassed 200 layers. This opens the door for the world’s first 200TB SSDs. For comparison, even the flashiest personal computers usually stop at 2TB of storage, and the current largest SSD in the world is Nimbus Data’s 100TB ExaDrive.

Prior to the innovation, the company’s NAND topped out at 176-layers. The new NAND is also 50% faster than Micron’s 176-layer offering, at a top speed of 2.4 gigabytes per second, while featuring 100% higher write bandwidth and 75% higher read bandwidth. The company also says that the 232-layer NAND has 1 terabyte per die, the highest areal density in the industry, and has heightened capacity and energy efficiency over previous Micron NANDs.

“Micron’s 232-layer NAND is a watershed moment for storage innovation as first proof of the capability to scale 3D NAND to more than 200 layers in production,” said Scott DeBoer in the company’s press release. DeBoer is Micron’s executive vice president of technology and products.

Speaking to Techradar Pro in 2020, Nimbus Data CEO Thomas Isakovich spoke promisingly about what this kind of NAND density can achieve, saying “We can do 200 TB in 2021 and likely 400 TB by 2023, depending on the timing of NAND density gains.” The pandemic’s certainly pushed that timetable back—2021 might have been too ambitious in the first place—but it seems that the company’s finally going to be able to get moving on it.

Micron says that the new NAND is in production at the company’s Singapore factory, and will ship to customers in “component form.” But in case you think this means you’re going to upgrade your gaming PC’s capacity by about 100 fold, think again. That 100TB SSD we mentioned earlier currently costs $40,000, and a 200TB one is going to be more expensive.

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I would love to see how fast this SSD is when copying 200TB of files in real life.

I wonder if a 200TB ever will become affordable for most middle class people living in most of North America.
 
Doesn't it feel good to feel poor when you can't get these right away? Like whoever has these should have really important plans or huge apps to run just to make up for the cost.
 
Doesn't it feel good to feel poor when you can't get these right away? Like whoever has these should have really important plans or huge apps to run just to make up for the cost.
They're definitely running some enterprise shit with high storage and also require SSD's. The storage array for our VDI setup at work alone costs $100k, and that's just the storage array along with the SSD's. The rest of the suite costs some extra ridiculous amounts. The VDI server is the only one that "requires" SSD's, the file server is fine with HDD's, but annoyingly have proprietary connections that are exclusive to Dell.
 
They're definitely running some enterprise shit with high storage and also require SSD's. The storage array for our VDI setup at work alone costs $100k, and that's just the storage array along with the SSD's. The rest of the suite costs some extra ridiculous amounts. The VDI server is the only one that "requires" SSD's, the file server is fine with HDD's, but annoyingly have proprietary connections that are exclusive to Dell.

Sounds like a complex setup. Hopefully your company has money to burn on increased ssd storage :p
 
Sounds like a complex setup. Hopefully your company has money to burn on increased ssd storage :p
It’s really not that complicated. One rack has the main suite of standard servers, stuff like 2 DC’s, file, print, WSUS, mail. The VDI one has its own rack, but still connects to the other one for all of it’s other features. It just has to have it’s own storage array for all of the VM’s for it.

We have a bottomless wallet for upgrades.
 
I don't know if I could even get close to using all of that storage! Perhaps if I was a heavier gamer.
 
Business purposes... yes that makes sense. Personally though I would never get close to using it up! :)
 
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