Ata sandisk ssd u100 scsi disk device specification
Sampling now with volume production scheduled for Q3 2011Ĭomputex, Taiwan, May 31, 2011- SanDisk Corporation (NASDAQ: SNDK), a global leader in flash memory storage solutions, today introduced two new solid state drives (SSDs) for the mobile computing market. SanDisk® iSSD™ integrated storage device series' i100 drive is the world's smallest, fastest 128 gigabyte (GB)2 (SATA III) BGA-based SSD-ideal for slim, high-performance tablets and ultra-thin notebooks SanDisk® SSD series' U100 drive for ultra-thin notebooks offers SATA III performance and customized form factors New SSDs combine fast SATA III performance with power consumption as low as 10mW1-enable feature-rich computing platforms with longer battery life SANDISK LAUNCHES TWO NEW SOLID STATE DRIVES (SSD) FOR TABLETS AND ULTRA-THIN NOTEBOOKS The i100 maxes out at 128GB and achieves a significantly slower write speed (160MB/s) than the U100, but it has same impressive read speed (450MB/s) - which should mean nippier tablets in the not-too-distant future. The company has doubled the speed of its existing iNAND embedded flash modules, and is also releasing a brand new SATA III drive, the i100, specifically for this form factor. Meanwhile, SanDisk hasn't forgotten about our desperate need for faster tablets.
ATA SANDISK SSD U100 SCSI DISK DEVICE SPECIFICATION PLUS
Specs table and triple-shot of PR coming up after the break, plus a gallery showing size comparisons of the U100 SSD in its glorious mSATA and Mini mSATA varieties, stacked up against some common objects like a 2.5-inch SSD drive, an HP Veer, and a vaguely goth bracelet. Mass production is expected in Q3 of this year. We're talking 450MB/s reads and 340MB/s writes thanks to the latest SATA III interface, plus a max capacity of 256GB - specs which have already enticed ASUS to use the U100 in its lightweight UX-series notebooks. The biggest news is the U100 range of tiny SSDs for ultraportables, which crank data in and out at twice the speed of SanDisk's previous generation P4 drives. # from /etc/grub.SanDisk has been pumping out press releases all day thanks to Computex-mania, so we shuffled past its stall to see what all the fuss is about. # It is automatically generated by grub-mkconfig using templates Number Start End Size Type File system Flagsġ 13.8GB 14.4GB 618MB primary fat32 boot, lba Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/4096Bĥ 981GB 986GB 4295MB linux-swap(v1) Linux swap Number Start End Size File system Name Flagsġ 1049kB 524MB 523MB ntfs Basic data partition hidden, diagĢ 524MB 629MB 105MB fat32 EFI system partition boot, espģ 629MB 646MB 16.8MB Microsoft reserved partition msftresĤ 646MB 1000GB 1000GB ntfs Basic data partition msftdata Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B