Feed: Richard Vanderhurst reviews the Seagate BlackArmor NAS 440 (6TB) - AggScore: 10.2
OCZ Vertex EX OCZSSD2-1VTXEX120G 120GB SATA II SLC Internal Solid state disk
There are few products that grab fan attention like SSDs have.
OCZ has made a well-deserved hum round the industry since they launched their Core II, peak, and Zenith multi-layer cell SSD products for retail clients.
Now they've gone a stage farther, and created a SLC SSD for the demanding establishment server segment. Baseline Reviews welcomes the OCZ peak EX SSD OCZSSD2-1VTXEX120G into the ranks, and our bandwidth performance tests compare the Vertex EX to several other SSDs occupying the top of the range market. Performance fans have been keeping notes on Solid State Drive technology for some time now. SSD products aren't main line, not yet, but that day isn't highly far off anymore.
Lower power consumption and heat output are benefits of the technology, but also they are the least galvanizing benefits any Solid State Drive can supply. The genuine payoff is a nearly-instant reply time and incredible high-performance throughput speeds. OCZ may not have made the Solid State Drive, but they've done more to bring SSD technology conventional than any other company in the entire industry. Once SSDs could at last outperform their HDD opposite number, the consultation became all about price and capacity. The OCZ Core Series helped offer reasonable Solid State Drive technology to the masses, but capacity and stuttering became new issues.
Adding up to 64MB of Elpida DRAM to the buffer has permanently solved stuttering issues, making raw performance the last bottleneck. An Indilinx 'Barefoot' internal controller commands the bank of Samsung K9HCG08U1M DRAM modules, permitting the OCZ Zenith Series SSD to supply a galvanizing capacity with unmatched performance.
Baseline Reviews tests the reaction time and bandwidth performance for the Apex EX SLC SSD against over two dozen other products in this article. Baseline Reviews latterly disclosed an article which details Solid State Drive ( SSD ) Baseline Performance Testing. The research and consultation that went into manufacturing that article altered how we now test SSD products. Our previous perceptions of this technology were lost on one special difference : the wear leveling algorithm that makes data a moving target.
Without definitive linear bandwidth testing or some other technique of total-capacity testing, our previous performance results were coarse guesstimates at best. It's critically crucial to appreciate that no software for the Microsoft Windows platform can exactly measure SSD performance in an equivalent fashion.
Artificial baseline tools such as HD Tach and ATTO Disk Baseline are helpful indicators, but shouldn't be considered the final determining factor. That factor should be measured in precise user experience of real-world applications. Baseline Reviews includes both bandwidth baselines and application speed tests to present a conclusive measurement of product performance. Entering the memory market in August 2 thousand, OCZ Technology was built round the doggedness to make the best high speed DDR and RDRAM. OCZ was set up by fans, for fans, and their dedication to the end-user hasn't digressed. OCZ Technology has been a trailblazer in many areas.
We were the initial manufacturer to make Twin Channel optimized memory available to the general public, which originally employed nVidia's Twinbank or Twin DDR design, found in their nForce chipset.
We have now taken that technology and tailored it for the Canterwood, and Granite Bay chipset's. OCZ developed and was first to effect ULN technology, which has been a critical part in the manufacturing process for a time period. We at OCZ conscientiously work to improve communication with CPU and motherboard chipset makers before the release of their products. Only in this way are we able to tune the memory's SPD settings, guaranteeing a synergistic relationship between the memory module, memory controller, and microprocessor. In today's quickly developing semiconductor industry, such communication isn't simply research, but a compulsory element of the manufacturing process.
About Richard Vanderhurst
Richard Vanderhurst reviews the most recent PC hardware & software and teaches SEO engineers on the island of Samoa, located between Australia and Hawaii, cutting edge formulas for site design and page rank methodologies to plug companies in the local communities, through on-line training classes held each month.
There are few products that grab fan attention like SSDs have.
OCZ has made a well-deserved hum round the industry since they launched their Core II, peak, and Zenith multi-layer cell SSD products for retail clients.
Now they've gone a stage farther, and created a SLC SSD for the demanding establishment server segment. Baseline Reviews welcomes the OCZ peak EX SSD OCZSSD2-1VTXEX120G into the ranks, and our bandwidth performance tests compare the Vertex EX to several other SSDs occupying the top of the range market. Performance fans have been keeping notes on Solid State Drive technology for some time now. SSD products aren't main line, not yet, but that day isn't highly far off anymore.
Lower power consumption and heat output are benefits of the technology, but also they are the least galvanizing benefits any Solid State Drive can supply. The genuine payoff is a nearly-instant reply time and incredible high-performance throughput speeds. OCZ may not have made the Solid State Drive, but they've done more to bring SSD technology conventional than any other company in the entire industry. Once SSDs could at last outperform their HDD opposite number, the consultation became all about price and capacity. The OCZ Core Series helped offer reasonable Solid State Drive technology to the masses, but capacity and stuttering became new issues.
Adding up to 64MB of Elpida DRAM to the buffer has permanently solved stuttering issues, making raw performance the last bottleneck. An Indilinx 'Barefoot' internal controller commands the bank of Samsung K9HCG08U1M DRAM modules, permitting the OCZ Zenith Series SSD to supply a galvanizing capacity with unmatched performance.
Baseline Reviews tests the reaction time and bandwidth performance for the Apex EX SLC SSD against over two dozen other products in this article. Baseline Reviews latterly disclosed an article which details Solid State Drive ( SSD ) Baseline Performance Testing. The research and consultation that went into manufacturing that article altered how we now test SSD products. Our previous perceptions of this technology were lost on one special difference : the wear leveling algorithm that makes data a moving target.
Without definitive linear bandwidth testing or some other technique of total-capacity testing, our previous performance results were coarse guesstimates at best. It's critically crucial to appreciate that no software for the Microsoft Windows platform can exactly measure SSD performance in an equivalent fashion.
Artificial baseline tools such as HD Tach and ATTO Disk Baseline are helpful indicators, but shouldn't be considered the final determining factor. That factor should be measured in precise user experience of real-world applications. Baseline Reviews includes both bandwidth baselines and application speed tests to present a conclusive measurement of product performance. Entering the memory market in August 2 thousand, OCZ Technology was built round the doggedness to make the best high speed DDR and RDRAM. OCZ was set up by fans, for fans, and their dedication to the end-user hasn't digressed. OCZ Technology has been a trailblazer in many areas.
We were the initial manufacturer to make Twin Channel optimized memory available to the general public, which originally employed nVidia's Twinbank or Twin DDR design, found in their nForce chipset.
We have now taken that technology and tailored it for the Canterwood, and Granite Bay chipset's. OCZ developed and was first to effect ULN technology, which has been a critical part in the manufacturing process for a time period. We at OCZ conscientiously work to improve communication with CPU and motherboard chipset makers before the release of their products. Only in this way are we able to tune the memory's SPD settings, guaranteeing a synergistic relationship between the memory module, memory controller, and microprocessor. In today's quickly developing semiconductor industry, such communication isn't simply research, but a compulsory element of the manufacturing process.
About Richard Vanderhurst
Richard Vanderhurst reviews the most recent PC hardware & software and teaches SEO engineers on the island of Samoa, located between Australia and Hawaii, cutting edge formulas for site design and page rank methodologies to plug companies in the local communities, through on-line training classes held each month.
Date Published: Jul 16, 2009 - 8:39 am
Beginning at $750 for 2TB, the Seagate BlackArmor 440 / 420 is probably the most reasonable high-capacity, top of the range NAS server. A failing to the BlackArmor is that its write speed might be better compared to its read speed. However, once it's set up, the NAS offers extremely fast read throughput rates, problem-free remote access, great expandability, and a large quantity of storage capacity : 8TB and beyond. The device is sold in 2TB, 4TB, and 6TB capacities. Now, you will need to provision your own drives to reach 8TBs, as Seagate hasn't released that model yet. If you are making a straightforward NAS for the home, we recommend the home, we get behind the Iomega Media Home Network drive. These ports, except for the linking of multiple units together for NAS to NAS backup, may also be used for assembly. Overall, the BlackArmor 440 / 420 posted fantastic data transference rates ; however, we wish the opening between its write and read scores wasn't as large.
About Richard Vanderhurst
Richard Vanderhurst has spent the last fourteen years developing new leading edge promoting and creative technical solutions for a vast number of projects hosted on the web across the world. He continues to refine his craft fourteen years developing new ideas and methodologies through the world of Internet Engineering and SEO. Richard Vanderhurst reviews all the latest computers and components on the Internet.
If you're trying to find an easy NAS for the home, we endorse the WD My Book World or the Iomega Media Home Network drive. For most tiny companies the BlackArmor has what you want. The BlackArmor 440 / 420 NAS server incorporates 2 Gigabit Ethernet ports. These ports, aside from permitting for the linking of multiple units together for NAS to NAS backup, may also be used for assembly. Overall, the BlackArmor 440 / 420 posted fantastic data transference rates ; however, we wish the opening between its write and read scores wasn't as large.
Date Published: Jul 07, 2009 - 2:50 am
