Join other TweakTown fans on our Facebook fan page!
Technology content trusted by users in Australia and around the world.
Sign up to our newsletterWatch our YouTube channelLike us on FacebookFollow us on Twitter+1 us on Google Plus

4,332 Articles | 23,842 Posts | 76,609 Members
Select Your Edition:USA EditionAU Edition
System
Builders
Guide

REALLY FRESH TECH CONTENT (OUR VERY LATEST STUFF)...

AU EditionYou are located: Home > Reviews > Storage > G.Skill TITAN 256GB 2.5-inch MLC Solid State Disk

G.Skill TITAN 256GB 2.5-inch MLC Solid State Disk

By: (more) | Storage Content | Posted: Jan 27, 2009 5:00 am
Click to search for the price of this item!Comment | Print | Email | Font Size: AA
Our Rating: 92% | Manufacturer: G.Skill

G.Skill TITAN FM-25S2S-256GBT1

 

Introduction

 

The SSD market is on fire, burning faster than even the most optimistic analysts could have predicted. G.Skill has played a large role in the solid state transition with their above average products at below average costs. Not only that, but we are really starting to see SSDs become user friendly as far as capacity goes. Last year we were talking about 32GB SSDs and how the speed was very impressive, but the capacity left room for doubt. Here we are a year later and we are already seeing close to a 10x increase in capacity for drives costing the same as the 32GB drives last year.

 

In G.Skill's latest SSD, capacity will have to just be a footnote in the overall scheme of things. The real story sits with the technology and what the company was able to do with JMicron's somewhat problematic controller. In essence, G.Skill was able to use two JMicron controllers with two separate banks of memory that work in tandem to reduce or eliminate the issues associated with writing multiple small files to the drive. I have seen the term RAID used a few times in other reviews and while the concept seems similar, it is not the case.

 

Today we are going to take a deep look at the new G.Skill TITAN FM-25S2S-256GBT1 drive with dual JMicron controllers working together to give you 256GB of storage capacity and at a claimed maximum of 200 MB/s read, 160 MB/s write. Let's dive right in.

 


Page 1 of 10


Further Reading: Read and find more Storage content at our Storage reviews, guides and articles index page.

TweakTown RSS FeedDo you get our RSS feed? Get It!

Post a Comment about this content

Related Tags


Storage News Posts

View More Storage News Posts

TweakTown Web Poll

Question: What new products do you most want to see at Computex 2012?

Audio

Cases, Cooling & PSUs

CPU, APU & Chipsets

Displays

Memory

Mobile Devices and Phones

Motherboards

Peripherals

Storage / SSDs

Ultrabooks and Laptops

Video Cards

Booth Babes

or View the Results

View More Polls

Forum Activity

View More Forum Posts

Storage Press Releases

View More Storage Press Releases