✨ We've just launched our NEW website design!

Learn More Here
News

Intel Launches 375GB Optane SSD With 3D XPoint

Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X

After nearly 2 years of waiting, Intel’s 3D XPoint memory products are finally arriving on the market. After being leaked last month, the company has finally unveiled their new Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X. As you might all already know, 3D XPoint memory sits in between NAND and DRAM, offering most of the benefits of both but with fewer weaknesses than the two.

The DC P4800X has a capacity of 375 GB and comes in PCIe add-in card form factor. Later in Q2, we will see a 750 GB PCIe card and the 375 GB model come in U.2. Later in the year, we will get the 1.5 TB model as well U.2 models for all the capacities. Intel is claiming sequential transfer rates of 2400MB/s read and 2000MB/s write but the real progress over NAND comes in its endurance and ability to sustain these transfer rates with 550,000 read IOPS and 500,000 write IOPS.

Compared to NAND, 3D XPoint is several orders of magnitude faster and more durable and 10x more dense than DRAM. This allows it to sustain its speeds even under demanding and random workloads over time. It’s also allowing the P4800X to serve as a DRAM replacement for certain enterprise configurations with Xeon CPUs. With the extra Memory Drive Technology add-on, 3D XPoint can become byte addressable and behave just like DRAM, albeit a bit slower and with less bandwidth.

With the ability to switch modes between NAND SSD and DRAM RAM, 3D XPoint opens up a large number of possibilities. We may see devices being able to swap from a consumer storage oriented mode to a performance content creator mode with a simple reboot, allocating system resource to optimize for the task at hand. Despite these interesting scenarios, don’t expect 3D XPoint in consumer devices anytime soon, the 375 GB costs a hefty $1520 and the Memory Drive Technology bundles goes to $1951. When a good enough 512 GB NAND SSD costs about 10x less, it’s hard for the average consumer to justify spending the extra cash.

Samuel Wan

Samuel joined eTeknix in 2015 after becoming engrossed in technology and PC hardware. With his passion for gaming and hardware, tech writing was the logical step to share the latest news with the world. When he’s not busy dreaming about the latest hardware, he enjoys gaming, music, camping and reading.

Related Articles

One Comment

  1. So if I buy dram for ~150$ 16Gb, buying intel optane 375Gb will make it ~2x cheaper? but will it be worth?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
Close

Adblock Detected

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker!   eTeknix prides itself on supplying the most accurate and informative PC and tech related news and reviews and this is made possible by advertisements but be rest assured that we will never serve pop ups, self playing audio ads or any form of ad that tracks your information as your data security is as important to us as it is to you.   If you want to help support us further you can over on our Patreon!   Thank you for visiting eTeknix