Fusion-io has announced a new high-performance series of accelerators

TECHi's Author Chastity Mansfield
Opposing Author Blogs Read Source Article
Last Updated
TECHi's Take
Chastity Mansfield
Chastity Mansfield
  • Words 105
  • Estimated Read 1 min

Fusion-io just took the wraps off a new, high-performance series of MLC NAND flash-based accelerators that push the limits in terms of speed and capacity. There are two families of products in the new Fusion-io Atomic series of products, the high-end and PX600 series and the not quite as high-end, but still drool-worthy SX300 series. The Fusion-io SX300 Atomic Series products will be offered in capacities of 1.25TB all the way on up to a massive 6.4TB. The 1.25, 1.6, and 3.2TB devices feature low-profile PCBs, while the larger 6.4TB Atomic SX300 has a half-length, but standard full-height PCB. All of the drives have PCIe 2.0 x8 connections. 

Blogs

Blogs

  • Words 178
  • Estimated Read 1 min
Read Article

Former Hewlett-Packard technology chief Shane Robison was hired last year to help reboot operations at Fusion-io, a pioneer in bringing smartphone-style data storage to computer rooms. Now he’s putting a stamp on its product line. The Salt Lake City company is hosting an event in San Francisco Wednesday to announce its next jump in technology, a piece of hardware called Atomic that is aided by a new generation of the widely used chips known as flash memory. Such solid-state data storage lets users fetch data much more quickly than the disk drives that have long been used to store most corporate data, while using much less energy and avoiding the risk of mechanical failures. Those are the reasons flash chips are the norm in smartphones, and are quickly being added to the server systems of big consumer websites and other customers that care about performance. Fusion-io is best known for circuit boards that plug directly into servers, while some other companies sell devices called solid-state drives that look more like disk drives and fit into their sockets.

Source

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

Balanced Perspective

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

TECHi’s editorial take above outlines the reasoning that supports this position.

More Two Takes from Wall Street Journal

AI Medical Scribe Startup Abridge Achieves $5.3 Billion Valuation in Latest Funding Round
AI Medical Scribe Startup Abridge Achieves $5.3 Billion Valuation in Latest Funding Round

Abridge's 93% valuation jump in four months tells us that something bigger than typical startup growth is cooking. It's a…

The man leading Apple’s electric vehicle project is leaving the company
The man leading Apple’s electric vehicle project is leaving the company

The man that was leading Apple's ultra-secret electric vehicle project has decided to leave the company, according to the Wall…

AT&T’s CEO claims corporations have no say in the encryption debate
AT&T’s CEO claims corporations have no say in the encryption debate

When it comes to respecting the privacy of its users and rejecting profligate government surveillance, few companies have as bad…

Apple made more than $20 billion from the App Store last year
Apple made more than $20 billion from the App Store last year

Whenever you hear about the ridiculous amounts of money that mobile games like Candy Crush Sage and Clash of Clans make,…