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  • Spooky23 20 minutes

    The press release is missing the key specification — how many Libraries of Congress fit on this thing?

  • cadamsdotcom 1 hours

    The word AI can be safely deleted wherever it occurs in this press release.

    Very cool bit of tech.

  • wokes 38 minutes

    Want, but then need two for reduncancy... then a spare for recovery... why not 3 raid or zfs... imagine the resilver time on this. It's hit the limit of data surety surely.

  • amelius 3 hours

    Data centers are winning.

  • gigatexal 3 hours

    Cost? Durability? Iops do we know?

  • i_think_so 2 hours

    https://web.archive.org/web/20260505162256/https://investors...

    Rather silly of them to hide investor relations material behind an anonymity-hostile CDN.

    PDF for those who want it. https://web.archive.org/web/20260506084407if_/https://invest...

  • WatchDog 4 hours

    Would like to see what the internals of this look like, how many flash packages and PCBs are in that tiny chassis?

  • therealmarv 58 minutes

    Meanwhile I'm still dreaming about any consumer and affordable 32TB or even 16TB portable SSD. Innovation and market for consumers are going backwards.

    Funny thing is that one of the best you can get is the Crucial (Micron) 8TB one but even that one gets more expensive. I have the feeling it will be gone completely soon.

    devttyeu 18 minutes

    Enterprise NVMe on the high end is now starting to ship batches at $1000/TB with existing stock around $500/TB. No consumer is going to pay that.

    But if you're buying a $500k GPU server putting 100TB of nvme in there for $50-100k is justifiable.

  • zekrioca 4 hours

    What is this thing that all pictures of new devices need to come with this black background?

    layer8 2 hours

    Dark mode.

  • esperent 6 hours

    Access Denied

    You don't have permission to access

    "http://investors.micron.com/news-releases/news-release-detai..." on this server.

    High security on this press release.

    asimovDev 3 hours

    even my AWS IP is let in without trouble

    tjwebbnorfolk 5 hours

    works for me. akamai doesn't like you

    el_snark 5 hours

    No problems here ...

    antonvs 1 hours

    Your IP address might be on a blocklist.

  • speedgoose 4 hours

    I look forward to have my favourite hyperscaler grant me 1000 "premium" IOPS per VM on this monster.

    cm2187 3 hours

    IOPS? This thing has slower IOPS than an old SATA SSD (~40k / QLC). I think it is meant for sequential operations only.

    stingraycharles 37 minutes

    [dead]

    perching_aix 2 hours

    Note how that is still well in excess of what e.g. AWS EBS GP3 volumes offer (or at least used to, though even now their "80K IOPS" is measured with 64 KiB random transfers, whereas Micron measured that 42K IOPS with 4 KiB random transfers), which is what the person above is gesturing towards.

    The same EBS GP3 used to be specified with 16K max IOPS at 16 KiB random transfers until pretty recently.

  • Aboutplants 46 minutes

    “For AI workloads: The 245TB Micron 6600 ION provided up to 84 times better energy efficiency”

    How big of a deal is this part in relation to the initial upfront costs? I’m not privy to the cost of power for SSD

    justsomehnguy 2 minutes

    With a modern CPUs hitting 400W it's already a problem to fill a rack top down with servers like you could do before: too many heat to dissipate and transfer, too much power to provide in the first place.

    Just imagine something like 2S 9565 in at least 2U machines: with 10 server x 2U x 2 CPU you would have 8kW in the processors alone and you didn't even fill half of the 42U rack.

    https://www.amd.com/en/products/processors/server/epyc/9005-...

    XorNot 37 minutes

    It means you don't have as much to cool.

    Getting rid of 30 watts of heat is trivial compared to say, 300 (I don't quite know how to read that ratio since a 2.5kW SSD seems a little high to me).

    feisty0630 31 minutes

    Given that 2.91TB SSDs are a common enterprise size, perhaps they're saying the 1x245TB SSD uses 1/84 the power of 84 2.91TB SSDs ;p

  • omeysalvi 5 hours

    Can someone who knows explain what is the benefit of having all that data in one ssd instead of splitting it up into hundreds of individual drives? Does the single ssd benefit is more performance or does it really tuen out to be cheaper than hundreds of individual drives?

    baq 5 hours

    You’re actually right, it’s just that datacenters like density and will gladly split your data onto hundreds of these little amazing magical bits of technology rather than hundreds of less magical ones in the same physical volume.

    UltraSane 3 hours

    DENSITY. Hyperscalers want to store as much data per rack and per data center as possible. They will eventually have hundreds of thousands of these drives.

    petra 4 hours

    Higher density, less power. Those are the bottlenecks in current and new data centers that are built out.

    So it's not exactly about cost savings, but having the option to do more, faster.

    Also, you could also get much higher bandwidth density out of this vs HDD, and this is great for AI training

    m-schuetz 2 hours

    Probably for a similar reason why I would rather buy a single 4TB SSD than fourty 100MB SSDs.

    lazide 5 hours

    They’ll still have hundreds of individual drives. Of these drives.

    rbanffy 4 hours

    And thanks to the density, they won’t need as many racks as they used to.

    brancz 5 hours

    It’s about density in a datacenter. With this you have 1PB in 4 drives, fitting in a 1u rack, which is just incredible. Also these drives don’t use regular SATA or SAS, they use PCIe, so these drives are also quite fast in comparison. Density has a power efficiency aspect as well both in just having fewer drives and requiring fewer servers to put drives into.

    pjc50 54 minutes

    For when you need to store a copy of the internet, and have been granted immunity for your copy of Anna's Archive.

    olavgg 2 hours

    A 42U rack filled with 1u servers with 8 drives each, will have 84PB of data. It feels like it was a few month ago where you could buy a rack with 1PB of storage, and that was awesome. Not anymore.

  • nine_k 6 hours

    The u.2 form factor is slightly larger than a 2.5" drive. I can imagine the entire space in it taken by Flash chips. I can't imagine what cooling scheme do they employ for the chips in the middle.

    adrian_b 3 hours

    The U.2 form factor is a 2.5" drive, not larger than it.

    "U.2" does not change anything in the mechanical characteristics of a 2.5" drive, it just replaces the SATA or SAS electrical interface with a NVMe electrical interface.

    You can mount a U.2 drive in any location intended for 2.5" drives, as long as its height can fit there.

    However, 2.5" drives come in various heights. Many laptops and mini-PCs that accept 2.5" drives accept only some of the smaller heights and they do not accept the greater heights, like 15 mm, which are typical for enterprise SSDs and HDDs, regardless whether they have a NVMe, i.e. U.2, or a SAS interface or a SATA interface.

    This new high-capacity U.2 SSD has the standard 15 mm height of the 2.5" form factor.

    rbanffy 4 hours

    The transfer rates limit how much each chip can be active at any given time, so a heat-aware writing allocator can pick the least active blocks for the next writes and distribute the heat accordingly. Even if it’s not heat-aware, the tendency will be that the writes will be distributed over as many chips as there are, and so will be the heat generated.

    Now, I would LOVE to see this much SLC flash on a direct to bus attachment setting.

    crote 4 hours

    Over the past few years the main improvement in SSD capacity has been due to them stacking an ever-increasing number of NAND layers in a single chip, with state-of-the-art SSDs already having over 300 layers.

    No need to worry about cooling when each layer in the sandwich is only a fraction of a micrometer thick!

    walrus01 4 hours

    the u.2 form factor indeed evolved from chassis designs that were originally 2.5" drives. It's now kind of becoming obsolete with new designs using things like E1S, E1L (exactly the correct height to be slotted into a 1U server, it's like a slightly wider M.2, but meant to be insertable and removable), and E3S and E3L.

    Note that the 245TB is an E3L, the half size version of it come in smaller size.

    https://americas.kioxia.com/en-ca/business/ssd/solution/edsf...

    https://www.exxactcorp.com/blog/storage/edsff-e1s-e1l-e3s-e3...

    https://www.simms.co.uk/tech-talk/e1s-e1l-the-new-server-for...

    MadnessASAP 5 hours

    Apparently TDP is 30 watts¹, according to the product brief. I would imagine it's a single PCB with flash chips on both sides then thermally bonded to the aluminum chassis. That should keep all chips at approximately the same temperature. On its own it could be easily air cooled, but with 24 in a 2U chassis you'll be having some decently hefty forced air over the drives.

    1. For comparison, an HDD usually comes in around ~10 watts

    trvz 4 hours

    It's not just a single PCB, but a sandwich of several.

    b112 1 hours

    The 4th Earl of Sandwich disagrees.

    cyberax 4 hours

    Given the cost of 24 of them, you can probably buy solid silver heatsinks watercooled with tears of sysadmins.

    i_think_so 2 hours

    Hey! You leave me out of your twisted fantasy!

    I just want....I just want hard drive prices to come back down. *sniffle*

    rbanffy 4 hours

    I was going to say blood of virgins, but tears are probably better heat conductors.

  • throwaway2037 2 hours

    I checked the specs here: https://www.micron.com/content/dam/micron/global/public/prod...

    The interface looks equiv to 4x PCIe 5.0.

        > Sequential read (MB/s): 13,700
        > Sequential write (MB/s): 2,700
    
    That is pretty awful write performance. Does anyone know more about this? I assume all of these hyperdense SSDs suffer from the same drawback. Also, I heard that the E3.L interface can support up to 16x lanes, but there are no practical commerical products at this point.

    justsomehnguy 19 minutes

    Extremely dense QLC chips. Still it's 2700-3000MByte, ie ~3GByte/second.

    What should worry way more is DWPD which is abysmal... on the first glance. But if you punch it in the calc it still would take ages to wear it out.

                        SSD #1    SSD #2     SSD #3
        Capacity (GB)   245000    245000     245000
        Warranty (yr.)  3         3          3
        DWPD            0.3       1          0.075
        TBW (TB)        80482     268275     20121
        TBW (PB)        80.483    268.275    20.121
        PBW             80.483    268.275    20.121
        GB/day          73500     245000     18375
                    
        Time period Average host-side write data rate (MB/s) needed for reaching DWPD value within specified time period
        8 hr.           2552.08   8506.94    638.02
        12 hr.          1701.39   5671.30    425.35
        24 hr.           850.69   2835.65    212.67
    
    
    https://wintelguy.com/dwpd-tbw-gbday-calc.pl

    voxelghost 2 hours

    65 hours to restore a full backup

    xattt 1 hours

    Yes, but with all that data, how much heavier does it get?

    jurgemaister 25 minutes

    2.231705*10^-13 gram

  • userbinator 5 hours

    QLC NAND

    The datasheet shows 3GB/s sequential write, which for 245.76TB means writing the whole drive takes around 22h45m. Odd that the endurance is specified as "1.0 SDWPD", which is almost meaningless since the drive takes roughly that long to write at full speed.

    At scale, 1.9 times more energy is required for an HDD deployment

    ...but those HDDs are going to hold data for far more than twice as long. It's especially infuriating to see such secrecy and vagueness around the real endurance/retention characteristics for SSDs as expensive as these.

    On the other hand, 60TB of SLC for the same price would probably be a great deal.

    rbanffy 4 hours

    You can trivially modulate flash endurance by tweaking the reported space - the less space you report, the more spares you have.

    crote 4 hours

    Perhaps their usual buyers just care less about retention?

    Those drives aren't going to be used for cold storage, and it is basically a guarantee that there will be checksums and some form of redundancy. Who cares whether the data is retained for 10 or for 15 years after writing when you can do a low-priority background scrub of the entire drive once a month, and when there are already mechanisms in place to account for full-drive failure?

    delamon 3 hours

    QLC retention reported to be around 1 year in unpowered state. I would assume, that drive does background refresh, though. No idea what effect it has on total drive lifetime. It is still mean that if you use it for cold storage it has to be powered.

    cm2187 2 hours

    Why is it mean? Why would you want to use a technology that is unsuitable for cold storage for cold storage? You won't even get the power / IOPS benefit if all it does is an infrequent replication of data and is then switched off.

    delamon 53 minutes

    What kind of usage do you envision for 245TB drive with read speed of 3GB/sec?

  • cammikebrown 5 hours

    How much is it?

    xbmcuser 4 hours

    4-5x times what it would have been if not for the demand from AI. According to my rough calculation 4-8tb ssd drives were going to reach parity with hdd this year

    baq 5 hours

    ‘Contact us’

    ukuina 5 hours

    If you have to ask...

    0-_-0 5 hours

    I don't think he wants to buy one

    el_snark 5 hours

    They haven't released details but I was able to find a Solidigm D5-P5336 122.88TB drive for around 40,000 USD, as a guideline. So ... more than that.

    ricardobeat 4 hours

    Apparently $80k, not that terrible in comparison

    mikestorrent 5 hours

    I was quoted $18K for a 3.7 TB Dell NVMe disk the other day. I'm gonna guess these drives are literally a quarter million each

    r_lee 1 hours

    > I was quoted $18K for a 3.7 TB Dell NVMe disk

    surely you don't actually think that's realistic pricing?

    UltraSane 3 hours

    $200/TB is reasonable. $300 if it is VERY fast. That is just robbery.

    cyberax 4 hours

    You're getting ripped off. NVMe SSDs are expensive, but not THAT expensive. A 4Tb drive should be around $1k even with some "enterprise" markup.

    dlenski 5 hours

    Okay, so that 122TB drive costs about $330/TB.

    I haven't bought a hard drive or an SSD in at least a decade (I get stuff for free, basically) but…that seems a bit high, right?

    Seems like well-rated consumer-level SSDs cost around $250 for 1TB right now.

    What accounts for the premium price/TB of these extremely high capacity enterprise-targeted drives?

    userbinator 5 hours

    What accounts for the premium price/TB of these extremely high capacity enterprise-targeted drives?

    The word "enterprise".

    rbanffy 4 hours

    > What accounts for the premium price/TB of these extremely high capacity enterprise-targeted drives?

    Spare capacity, mostly. That’s why they have higher endurance. If you want to double the endurance of a given drive, tell the controller to allocate twice as many spare blocks and report less capacity than you would otherwise.

    In this case, you are also paying a premium for the PCIe attachment instead of SAS, and a lot for price elasticity. You see, with drives like these you slash space and energy consumption in relation to HDDs by a large number, and that allows you to pay a premium for the device, because, at the end of its lifetime, it’ll have more than covered the cost difference in saved space and energy.

    jasomill 3 hours

    Density, power efficiency, write endurance, sustained write speeds under continuous load, power-loss protection.

    5 hours

    bogometer 4 hours

    I fondly remember when i could buy a well-rated consumer-level SSD for a lot less per TB...

    jasomill 3 hours

    I paid $300 each for my last two SSDs, 4 TB Samsung 990 Pros.

    They’re currently selling for $942.72 on Amazon.