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Solid State Drives
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A solid-state drive (SSD), sometimes called a solid-state disk or electronic disk, is a data storage device that uses solid-state memory to store persistent data with the intention of providing access in the same manner of a traditional block I/O hard disk drive. SSDs are distinguished from traditional magnetic disks such as hard disk drives or floppy disk, which are electromechanical devices containing spinning disks and movable read/write heads. In contrast, SSDs use microchips that retain data in non-volatile memory chips and contain no moving parts. Compared to electromechanical HDDs, SSDs are typically less susceptible to physical shock, are silent, have lower access time and latency, but are more expensive per gigabyte.
SSDs use the same interface as hard disk drives, thus easily replacing them in most applications.


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Date
November 2012 SSD Synchronous NAND
November 2012 ADATA SSD SX910 512 GB (5SSD512AS)
October 2012 SSD vs HDD in 2012
April 2012 ADATA SSD SX900 256 GB (5SSD256AS)
April 2012 ADATA SSD SP900 128/256 GB (5SSD128A)/(5SSD236A)
March 2012 Adata S510SSD SATA
March 2012 Hybrid SSD/HDD and SSD are 2 Different Things
December 2011 ADATA S510 SSD SATA3
July 2011 ADATA S511 SATA 3 SSD
July 2011 Intel Solid-State Drive 320 Series