Cerb
Elite Member
- Aug 26, 2000
 
- 17,484
 
- 33
 
- 86
 
I disagree. Being in the same price range, and not hiding pricing and availability behind someone like EMC, made OCZ the only meaningful competition at the time of my post. When there is only one brand, and that brand is OCZ, it's not a strawman to compare them to the near-future market entry of Intel. It is the reasonable comparison to make.OCZ being cheap or widely available doesn't make it not a strawman.
It's the difference between selling hardware and selling your sales rep. Right now there are not dozens of other brands, so much as there are dozens of companies trying to compete with the likes of IBM and EMC at providing you "solutions" and the like. Yes, there are other brands, but the middlemen you choose to use matter. If Intel acts like the Intel we know and love/hate usually acts, they will use that lack of much open competition to their advantage, and sell them much like OCZ sells their Velodrives (which support HW RAID, but make no secret that they are SATA drives on a card).
There is now Fusion-io, as well, though. I just found that Intel's announcement has conveniently coincided with Fusion-io announcing a newer cheaper card. Fusion-io also does not hide pricing, and there are plenty of easily accessible resellers. Just that most everything they have out already is not nearly in the same price range. Quite a convenient coincidence for Intel, isn't it? I mean, to announce an upcoming PCI-e SSD product on the same day as a competitor, that doesn't have nearly the mindshare, announces one? It's almost like Intel planned to overshadow Fusion-io's announcement with their own. :sneaky:
It wouldn't surprise me if they plan on a more affordable, server card line to follow it up, too.
20+ drives takes quite some room, 5+ cables (20+ if you fan out), and additional controller cards. I understand being SAS drives on cards and not supporting HW RAID leaves out potential customers, but I don't get how that makes it any less a PCI-e SSD. It plugs into a PCI-e slot, with nothing needed beyond the card, and has what is necessary to take advantage of the extra bandwidth PCI-e provides.I clearly explained that could get SATA based on SSDs instead with no loss.
This so called "PCIe SSD" is a 4 port SAS non raid controller attached to 1 or two daughter boards, each daughter board is 2 SATA SSDs which plug into the SAS controller.
If you're fine with 20+ drives, several controller cards, and 6+ cables to go to go with them, why would you bother with PCI-e SSDs in the first place? In that case, nobody's PCI-e SSD will offer any value.
			
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