An interesting thing about NAND Flash SSD (Solid State Drive) technologies, beyond the fact that the market is flush with competitive product offerings, is that the technology itself is very flexible and adaptable to a number of different design approaches, other just the straight-forward SATA-based SSDs. Take for example the RAID 4-pack configuration we setup here with Intel's X25-M SSD or perhaps the omnipotent Fusion-io ioDrive. Granted, these are rather high-end, pricey setups, but you get the gist that solid state storage arena is just getting warmed up. In a sort of hybrid version of Fusion-io's product and our little RAID 4-pack array we setup for testing, memory solutions manufacturer OCZ Technology has introduced an almost fully integrated solution of their SATA-based SSD technology, along with a third party RAID controller, all wrapped up clean and tidy on a standard plug and play (no longer pray) PCI Express X8 adapter card. Dubbed the Z-Drive, we first got a look at this wild-eyed beast back in May. It wasn't quite ready for prime time back then and it re-emerged again in early September with specs that admittedly caused a pavlovian response of our salivary glands. Today, we get to satiate ourselves with a deep dive look at the new OCZ Z-Drive, in a tasty 256GB variant that drops in at an almost reasonable $899 price point that is on near cost parity with a standard mid-range SSD. This is a very different approach to SSD technology, one that occupies a PCI Express slot instead of a SATA port. First we'll dig into what makes it tick and then we'll see how it ticks through our benchmark time trials.OCZ Z-Drive m84 PCI-Express SSD Review
i am so confused as to who will actually buy this.
the price tag is the "for work" levels, ie not home use.
but work related use needs performance, and an X25-E would kill this thing it seems. =\
poor OCZ, i really like your company but you can't seem to figure out how to make an intel beater yet =[
~~Dell Laptop , D520, Core2Duo @ 2.0Ghz undervolted to 1.0v
This is definitely something to pass on,.................
Intel DP55KG with Liquid Cooled Intel Core i7 870 CPU @ 3.75GHz
8GB Kingston Hyper-X DDR-3 RAM
2GB GTX-285 Video
2 SATA-II 7200 RPM 1-TB HDD'S in RAID-0
LiteOn 22x DVD±R/±RW DL
LiteOn Blu-Ray Reader
ViewSonic 22" Wide Screen LCD Display
Xtreme Gear USB Keyboard
Xtreme Gear USB Mouse
CyberPower 800W Power Supply
CoolerMaster Storm Sniper Gaming Case
Agreed. Expected better from OCZ. This drive is not mainstream by any means.
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