Improved SSD Performance Coming Soon

Since before Lionel first blogged about solid state drives (SSD) on Latitude laptops, we were seeing interest the technology from our customers. Back in March, IdeaStorm user tablet205 submitted an idea called Solid State Drives as option in Notebooks. We've seen comments from Direct2Dell readers like Nick who is looking forward to performance gains. Since then, we've expanded the offering to XPS and Dell Precision mobile workstations.

Though SSD technology is new and will have growing pains, we believe in flash technology because of what it can enable. The technology could completely change the way we think about notebook design, for example. Because flash is essentially a "circuit board" we can put it in one or several locations in a notebook chassis and can revolutionize the way notebooks are designed. This means thinner, lighter and more durable designs with performance that can compete with desktops. 

In various conversations that we've seen, three areas emerge where SSDs can stand some improvements:

  • Performance - most first generation SSDs perform near 5,400 RPM drive levels
  • Capacity - Originally available in 32 GB size, we've seen that double to 64 GB and one of the capacity points in sight is 128 GB
  • Price - these drives do command a hefty price tag, but over time we expect it to decline as the technology evolves and more mainstream adoption occurs                    

You will see us rolling out projects that improve on all these areas.  Today, I wanted to let our customers know that in the coming weeks we will be launching the Dell Flash Ultra Performance SSD based on Samsung's SATA II-SSD technology, available in 32GB and 64GB capacities, which will leave traditional notebook hard drives in the dust. This generation of SSDs delivers on the hype we've all read about: reliability, durability AND performance.

Our labs benchmarked this drive in a Latitude notebook and saw a 35 percent overall system performance increase over a standard 2.5-inch 5400rpm notebook hard drive using SYSmark ‘07.  That's even more impressive when you realize that the difference between standard 5400 rpm and performance 7200rpm drives (in the same generation) is 10 percent on average.  And just for fun, we did a shootout between the new SSD and a few desktop drives and, well, let's just say that the performance gap is becoming a thing of the past.  Preliminary tests showed that this drive outperformed a 10,000 RPM desktop drive in overall system performance!

Now you're thinking... "Great, but how can anyone possibly pay more for these ultra performance SSDs than current ones?"  That's the best part, the drive got a lot smarter, not a lot more expensive.  Dell and Samsung engineers optimized the way data is handled and drastically improved performance to an "awe-worthy" level without adding much more cost to the drive.

We'll roll this drive out in the coming weeks across our Dell Precision, Latitude and Alienware and XPS laptops. Look for updates very soon.  In the meantime, we would love to hear your thoughts on SSD and how you think it could change the future of laptops.

Comments  Comment RSS Feed

Will current Dell PC owners be able to purchase these SSD drives separately? I recently purchased a Dell XPS M1530 (RED) laptop. I would be interested in purchasing a SSD and adding it to my XPS laptop - and review and discuss my experiences on my blog.

- Brandon LeBlanc

Lionel Menchaca, Chief Blogger said:

@Brandon: I've asked some folks about your question. Hopefully will have an answer for you soon.

BTW: Thanks for buying a (RED) Dell product.

Sarah Williams, Client Storage & Emerging Tech said:

Hi Brandon.  As Lionel mentioned, thanks for supporting (Product) Red! 

Soon after the Ultra Performance SSD launch you will be able to order one separately, as a customer kit for your XPS M1330. 

We will be offering customer kits for the XPS, Latitude and Precision Mobile notebooks.  I'm looking forward to what you have to say about the new drives.  I think you're going to be impressed.

Nicholas Saraniti said:

 Isecond Brandon's remarks.  Many people with Gen 1 SSD'd have had major issues where thier machines just "Lock up" due to the poor performance of the very exspensive gen 1 drives.

aikiwolfie said:

Personally I think SSDs are critical to the development of not only notebooks but also desktops and all other types of computers. While hard drive manufacturers will continue to squeeze more capacity from magnetic disks for a few more years I am doubtful as to how much longer that can continue.

If technical barriers with the storage technology don't get in the way then power consumption will be an issue. Which is where the traditional HDD will always lose out to the SSD.

In a world where climate change is an issue that keeps coming around and never really goes away we need to learn to do more with less. Which is what SSDs empower us to do.

maxx said:

will be available SOON in italy (and all europe) too?

in italy we are still waiting for penryn, blu-ray and wusb on xps m1330 and some new improvement, as i ask in my ideastorm posts... 

soon: i hope.
 

Les Tokar said:

A positive move for Dell bringing a drive with read/ write speeds both claimed to be in excess of 100MB/s by Samsung, this at a time when companies are settling in at lower speeds in exchange for higher capacity in multi level cell ssds.

Ive done several ssd reviews on www.notebookreview.com and would invite Dell to lend me an ssd for testing if possible.

With NAND prices now dropping, the world of ssd is just starting to heat up and there is going to be huge announcements within the first two Q of this year.

jervis961 said:

Hopefully with the decrease in price Dell will also release notebooks with room for 2 hard drives.  I find it increasingly difficult to use my 60GB drive (oh wait 55GB due to Dell partitioning).  I would love to go SSD but 64 GB will not be enough to last me.

DE said:

I am glad to see that Dell is leading the industry in SSD.  i am interested in seeing Dell's solutions for the 3 challenges metioned above. 

texas1040 said:

First, thanks for the heads up.  I plan to order an XPS 1330 when the new drives are available.

I would like to see the SSD as an option in desktop systems as well. 

I'm also in the market for a new desktop system this year.  Today I'm running an 80 GB disk in my desktop, but its only half full.  So for me, a 64GB SSD would be OK in a desktop, 128 GB ideal.  Allow the option of an additional relatively low cost traditional hard disk for archival bulk storage of video, and you've covered 80%+ of the customer base.

My goal is a silent (no fan noise) system.  I'd be willing to pay some premium for that - I expect it would take factory installed passive cooling.  But an SSD would at least be a step in the right direction.

P.S.  I'd like to see Dell routinely show specifically which SSD they are using, so those customers who care can use the excellent work of Les Tokar (above) and others to evaluate performance impact.

 

Hi whats the heat situation like on the new SSD drives?

I plan on getting an 1330 in the summer, so a general post on heat and fan noise would be good. My current laptop gets very warm, so its a big concern for me and for a lot of readers.

Also is there a rough idea of pricing for SSD, is it similiar to the current pricing? You said 'without adding much more cost to the drive.' does this mean its more than current SSD or are you comparing it to standard hard drives?

Thanks

Les Tokar said:

Lionel,

If Dell would be so kind as to get a sample SSD to me, I would be more than happy to review it and then publish the results here in addition to the sites that utilize my results.  I only write this after seeing the positive support for my work by Texas1040 above along with a few PM's received on the site through other who have sought me out.

As mentioned in my letter, credit for much of this started with you.

 Thanks again and hoping to get a review in.

Les Tokar

Zed said:

When will the new SSD discks will be available in france. I'm delaying my purchase (Lattitude XT) untill then.

zanlok said:

I am *really* interested to see a detailed set of specs that compare the usual SSD drives to these new "ultra" options. I want not just read times, but a lot about random-access writes (since that is where SSDs have been weak thus far - as compared to HDs). I'd also like to see a comparison of the power utilizations - and conclusions about the expected battery life for the "ultra" SSDs as compared to those in the non-ultra variety.

danny said:

i have a ssd in my dell m1330 , only  sata 1 though but very quick at app load up time ect ,write speed sucks a little . i guess you cant win them all untill i read this thread about a new faster ssd by samsung. i am very intrested in one of these as an upgrade but depending on price as there is competatition on the horizion with intel and alike entering the ssd race .please could you inform me of a rougth price margin the devices will fall in.many thanks.

zanlok said:

So, Dell.. anyone? It's been a coulpe weeks. I really would like to see a post somewhere about how these ultra drives perform. Hard numbers. Especially for the writes!

Lori said:

When will you have a 15 inch laptop available with a 512mb video card?  Thanks!

Khanh said:

When will these new SSD drive will ship?  How will we know if our laptop have these new SSD drive or the old one?

 

Thanks,

Khanh 

Lionel Menchaca, Chief Blogger said:

Khanh: We're shipping on the new SSD drives as an option on the Precision M6300 mobile workstation. I don't know for sure when we'll start to offer on Inspiron and XPS laptops.

It will be easy to tell which SSD drive you will be getting because we brand the new SSD drives differently. They are called Dell Flash Ultra Performance SSD drives. Here's a screenshot from the M6300 in the configurator on Dell.com:

Impatient Mc Gillis said:

Hurry UP already! I'm already buying these drives from ebay, what is taking so long with these in the XPS? HURRY UP HURRY UP.

 Dell is just holding out for maximum effect. By the time you finally start rolling these out accross all models, this new drive will be obosolete in less than 6 months anyways just like everything else, when the new SATA III and SATA IV come out.

It amazes me how people will spend so much money on new technologies & a measily 20% gain when prices can drop overnight by 80% and newer faster (always newer, faster, & cheaper) always comes in the next few months.

BLAH!

 It's OK with me, I just want em for resale anyways. HURRY UP!!

 

Ray said:

Wouldn't it be nice if they were in RAID? I won't touch a system anymore unless it is.

Les Tokar said:

I have just completed my review on this ssd and it performed impressively.

 It can be found here and thank you very much for the opportunity Dell!

 Hope we can do this again with the 128Gb when it arrives!

 Les

 

jer said:

The branding here is still a little confusing.  Specifically, the XPS M1330 offers this option: "Ultra Performance: 64GB Solid State Drive".  This phrase is different from what the above comments suggest we can look for to tell the difference, which on the Precision M6300 is called "Dell Flash Ultra Performance SSD, 2.5MM".  The "Ultra performance" part might imply it's the new drive, but that's not clear: since the only SSD option uses a blend of the old and new terminology, it might be just a marketing phrase.

Also, any update arrival estimates would be much appreciated, e.g. in the Latitude D630.  (Assuming it is still coming, of course -- or maybe it already arrived and the phrasing wasn't obvious.)

May 7th and still waiting for rollout on XPS1330 in Europe... 

Vince said:

Really need faster hard drives for desktops.

It`s simple disk utilization is where we loose time : CPU 20% DISK 100%.

Intensive data read access is required today by all my IT developpers that are compiling 1GB applications and running 100 processes that read disk,

 15K and SCSI were ok  but now it`s not making any sense to go that way with huge multimedia and hd.

 

 

 

Francois Bertrand said:

With SSD's finally beating Raptors soundly (OCZ, Memoright), will we see high-performance SSD's on XPS desktops anytime soon? I mean the new, good ones, 130MB/s R&W?


We actually use our XPS systems for engineering work and use the performance of the latest SSD's in our top systems.


Alex said:

I am still wondering when the "Flash Ultra Performance SSD" will be available for XPS 1330?

ssabet said:

I'm planning to buy a Dell Precision M6300 Laptop very soon, but I need to have at least 128GB of Flash Ultra Performance SSD.

Can Dell build me a Precision M6300 with the above SSD requirement at the present time?

Please note 64GB SSD is not large enough for my business needs.

SSabet

ballen said:

Just ordered M1330 (US) - actually changed order from 160GB 7200 HD when I noticed the SSD 128GB offered last week (assume Samsung) for the same price (upgrade) as 64 GB ($500). The size was the deal maker and justified the price.  From all the reviews on the Samsung - 90 MB read/70MB write, .2 W idle/.5 W operating power & 20 year life span, it's a no-brainer. 25% off system coupon also  helped desicion.   

Leave a Comment

Compose
Preview
(required ) 
(required , not published) 
(optional )
(required ) 

Note: Conversation is encouraged and expected. However, moderation of comments is necessary to prevent spam, personal attacks, profanity, mentions of legal action or off-topic commentary. We will not publish comments that advertise third-party shopping sites or ones that violate our terms of service.

Comments related to specific product support or customer service issues will be addressed separately rather than posted here. Please use the links in Contact Us for product and customer service assistance.