- Aug 10, 2005
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http://thessdreview.com/our-reviews...w-performance-meets-emlc-endurance-and-value/
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Looks cool to me!
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Looks cool to me!
TLC will never ever touch my computer. Really, we should all be using SLC, but for some reason, they say it is too expensive. Is it really???
I am surprised no one offered eMLC drives to the consumer market before (if they did, oops). 2000/3000 cycles may be enough for 10 years but I have friends who won't touch SSDs because there are not enough write cycles.
Yes. Cost is related to how much silicon it takes, and SLC takes 3x the silicon of TLC for the same capacity.
How long do MLC SSDs hold data when unpowered? 5 years? 10 years? Does the time change when the rated cycles are reached (1000-3000 write cycles) vs when the drive has only a few cycles on it?
Some SSDs are rated for offline retention, but most aren't. Minimum retention could certainly be extrapolated for some given flash, with a few weeks or months of data across a wide enough range of chips, but most need to get their drives out to the market now, so the actual value is whatever chance has allowed for.How long do MLC SSDs hold data when unpowered? 5 years? 10 years? Does the time change when the rated cycles are reached (1000-3000 write cycles) vs when the drive has only a few cycles on it?
With an HDD (except for a few, like WD AV and Red), you actually want to read the data.So if the drive is powered but no writes happen, does the data not disappear over time? Is the requirement here to keep the drive on or to write actively to it?
With an HDD (except for a few, like WD AV and Red), you actually want to read the data.
With flash, I really don't know enough to know what happens if you have it on, but aren't writing to it. If you are writing, then it will be re-written as part of the wear-leveling process. Every read technically weakens it, and it loses charge over time, so each time it needs to be read, the drive might decide to move it as part of the next batch of writes.
If used regularly, it shouldn't be an issue, but the SSD makers are exceptionally guarded about their wear leveling specifics. I've tried to dig up details a few times, but the most I could find are some uni studies of single chips, or software-wear-leveled systems from several years ago.
It's not a matter of being hard. It's that the SSD manufacturers seem to consider such details to be among the secrets that they don't want the competition to be able to easy know, in case some aspect turns out to offer a competitive advantage or disadvantage.I imagine it can't be too hard to code some sort of conditional auto-scrub routine, but I could be wrong.
How long do MLC SSDs hold data when unpowered? 5 years? 10 years? Does the time change when the rated cycles are reached (1000-3000 write cycles) vs when the drive has only a few cycles on it?
So if the drive is powered but no writes happen, does the data not disappear over time? Is the requirement here to keep the drive on or to write actively to it?