Professional Documents
Culture Documents
the
market. Like all SSDs, that model was designed to appear to a computer like a traditional rotating disk,
while storing and retrieving data far faster than traditional hard drives could. Such devices are called
"solid-state" because they contain no moving parts, only memory chips.
Over the years, the computer industry's quest for faster, cheaper, higher-capacity SSDs has driven
storage technology in ways no one could have foreseen in 1976, including the use of SSDs as the primary
storage component in some consumer PCs.
In the next 15 slides, you'll witness the evolution of the solid-state drive, from a bulky, obscenely
expensive server accessory to a tiny consumer box (with hundreds of gigabytes of capacity) that anyone
can buy for $50.
The World's First SSD
The product consisted of a rack-mount chassis--measuring 19 inches wide by 15.75 inches tall--that held
up to eight individual memory boards, each packed with 256KB of RAM chips. In total, the Bulk Core
system could provide a massive 2MB of storage for minicomputers such as the DEC PDP-11 and the Data
General Nova. Data-access times ranged from 0.75 milliseconds to 2 milliseconds, depending on the
controller board. (Today, SSDs regularly have 0.06ms access times.)
A Bulk Core setup, including a controller board and 256KB of storage, cost $9700 in 1977, which is
equivalent to $36,317 today. At that pricing rate, a 1TB SSD (which costs about $1100 today) would have
cost $152 billion.
Cabinet-Size SSD
The STC 4305, which emulated the IBM 2305 drum-storage unit, represented a significant boost in the
capacity of SSDs. A 4305 cabinet could hold up to 45MB of data, which it stored using charge-coupled
devices, a novel approach at the time. Such a system, including the required dual controller cards, would
set you back $400,000 in 1978 (about $1.5 million in today's dollars). If that sounds like a lot for storing
the equivalent of one moderately sized smartphone app, consider that this device was 52 percent
cheaper than the drum-storage equivalent IBM sold.
Axlon was one of many companies producing SSDs for personal computers. The 1983 PION Interstellar
Drive worked with many models of home computers and held up to 1MB of storage. Its 256KB base
configuration sold for $1095, while each additional 256KB card cost $595.
The Synetix 2202 plugged into an Apple II expansion slot and held up to 294KB for $529. Both products
used volatile RAM chips that needed constant power to retain data.
he World's First Flash SSD
In 1988, a small Alabama-based PC vendor called Digipro revealed a prototype of the world's first solidstate drive to use flash memory, which the introduction of Intel'sNOR flash memory chips earlier in the
year had made possible.
Called simply Flashdisk, Digipro's plug-in board for IBM PC compatibles could hold up to 16MB of data. It
shipped in January 1990 in 2MB, 4MB, 6MB, and 8MB capacities, with the high-end version selling for
$5000. An Israeli flash company called M-Systems created its own flash-drive prototype in 1989, but
didn't commercialize it until 1995, making Flashdisk the first flash SSD to market.
Early 1990s Server SSDs
In the early 1990s, flash memory was still costly and rare, and it didn't boast the same data-access times
as dynamic RAM-based SSDs did. Such RAM-based SSDs were useful mostly in large server applications
that demanded high-speed data access.
DEC, for instance, offered two lines of SSDs in the early 1990s. The EZ5x series of 5.25-inch SCSI-based
drives shipped in capacities of 107MB ($13,999) to 428MB ($47,099). The faster ESE50 series offered
capacities from 120MB ($40,000) to 1GB ($135,000). With prices like that, DEC's largest SSD customer
was probably Tony Stark.
1990s Workstation SSDs
The two dynamic RAM-based solid-state drives you see here, the NewerTech Dart Drive (which held up
to 512MB) and the ATTO SiliconDrive II (which stored up to 2.6GB), both used the SCSI interface. Priced
in the many thousands to tens of thousands of dollars, both were aimed at the high-endSun
workstation market. They offered blisteringly fast access times (0.02ms for the SiliconDrive II) compared
to hard drives of the day.
Most RAM SSDs of the 1990s contained both a battery backup and a hard disk that would automatically
store the RAM disk's contents if power were lost.
irth of the Modern Flash Drive
In 1995, Israeli firm M-Systems set the template for the modern flash-based SSD with its Fast Flash Disk
(FFD-350) series, one of the first flash SSDs to ship in the 3.5-inch form factor that most hard drives used
at the time. The first FFD-350 models used the SCSI interface and shipped in capacities from 16MB to
896MB. With prices typically in the tens of thousands of dollars per drive, these SSDs found use mostly
in military and aeronautical applications that demanded rugged data storage.
Over the next decade, M-Systems continued to expand its FFD line, with higher capacities, faster access
times, and different designs, as shown on the right.
Using wear-leveling technology, flash SSDs in 2006 were capable of many more rewrites than flash
media cards at the time, bringing them closer to replacing mechanical hard drives for everyday use. This
new generation of products triggered a consumer SSD market explosion that continues to this day.
Current Events
Today's consumer SSDs keep getting faster and cheaper thanks to new flash chips and higher-speed
SATA interfaces. For example, the 160GB member of the Intel 320 SSD series, shown here, currently
retails for about $320 and offers sustained read speeds of 270 MBps.
Manufacturers are also experimenting with new ways to package SSDs, as illustrated by the Viking
Modular SATADIMM: It uses a spare 240-pin DRAM slot on your motherboard to host a tiny, 25GB to
400GB flash-based SSD. Only time will tell if this novel format--which still uses a SATA cable to transfer
data--will gain widespread use.