Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Drives using the new NVMe standard are taking the solid state market by storm

Add as a preferred source on Google

On April 2nd Intel took the wraps off its 750 Series, the first consumer-focused solid state drive to ever use the Non-Volatile Memory Express (NVMe) interface. This new standard uses PCI Express lanes to transmit data, providing speeds well in excess of SATA, the standard that up until now has dominated hard drives. The boost in performance is necessary, as many modern solid state drives have peak bandwidth well in above what SATA can handle.

Intel was the first to announce, but it’s hardly alone. April has turned into the month of NVMe as companies reveal their latest hardware in close succession. HP quickly followed up with the announcement of its HP Z Turbo Drive G2, a desktop drive that uses Samsung memory to achieve claimed peak read speed of 2,150 megabytes per second, even quicker than Intel’s 750. The drive won’t appear until June.

Recommended Videos

Another, lesser known company, HGST, also entered the desktop drive with its Ultrastar SN150. Available in capacities up to an astonishing 3.2 terabytes, the drive claims peak sequential read speeds of 3,000 megabytes per second, almost doubling the claimed bandwidth of the Intel 750. HGST says the drive is shipping, but it’s meant for the enterprise market rather than consumer, and isn’t currently available at any online retailer.

Samsung, of course, didn’t just provide HP a drive to use for its own purposes. It has also entered the NVMe game with a new version of the SM951 solid state drive, which adheres to the small M.2 form factor. Samsung says the drive has entered mass production and should soon appear in 128GB, 256GB and 512GB capacities with read speeds of up to 2,260 megabytes per second. Pricing is not yet available.

Apple has jumped on NVMe, as well, with its new MacBook and OS X 10.3.3, which provides support for the standard. Cuptertino’s engineers moved to PCI Express some time ago in the majority of its systems, of course, which is why the company’s notebooks usually far outpace Windows counterparts in solid state drive performance. Yet the hardware was still held back by its use of the aging Advanced Host Controller Interface. Switching to NVMe opens up the possibility for even greater performance gains.

With the exception of the Intel 750, all of the drives announced so far use a pre-existing PCI Express connector, be it a desktop motherboard PCIe x4 slot or M.2, which is common in high-end notebooks. The third option is a cabled connection called mini-SAS, which makes it possible to install these drives like traditional SATA SSDs. Asus has announced mini-SAS support native to its new Asus TUF Sabertooth X99 motherboard, and also announced that other motherboards based on the Z97 and Z99 chipset will become compatible after a BIOS update and installation of an adapter. MSI has announced a “M.2 to Turbo Mini-SAS” adapter that offers the same functionality.

The speed at which NVMe is moving is impressive. The Intel 750 SSD doesn’t even ship until April 24th, yet already two motherboard manufacturers have pledged support through BIOS updates and adapter cards, and consumers will have at least four drives to choose from by summer. What’ll really make the standard’s acceptance grow, however, is the next generation of Intel processor hardware expected later this year. Chipsets for 6th-generation Core processors will no doubt offer native NVMe support, and that will really open the floodgates.

Matthew S. Smith
Matthew S. Smith is the former Lead Editor, Reviews at Digital Trends. He previously guided the Products Team, which dives…
I’m not sold on Googlebook’s future, but it sure has two big wins I can’t ignore
Magic Pointer and native Android app could help Googlebook prove its future
Googlebook

Shortly after its announcement, the discourse surrounding Googlebook quickly took over forums, subreddits, X, and other social media platforms. Google just introduced a new category of laptops built around Gemini Intelligence, Android integration, ChromeOS, phone continuity, premium hardware, and OEM partners.

Yet, I am still not fully sold on the larger future Google is describing here. Google has been in laptops for more than 15 years through Chromebooks, and the company itself frames Googlebook as a move from an operating system to an “intelligence system.” This sounds like the "future" of laptops, but it also carries the Google problem, where it introduces an interesting idea before the ecosystem has proven itself.

Read more
Google will let some Chromebooks transition into a Googlebook experience soon
Google says some existing models will move into the Googlebook experience, while ChromeOS support continues for devices left behind
Clothing, Coat, Footwear

Googlebook is launching this year, but Google isn’t cutting every Chromebook loose.

In an interview with Chrome Unboxed, Google VP John Maletis said some Chromebooks will be able to move into Googlebook-style software through a firmware update. This means Googlebook shifts Google’s laptop plans toward an Android foundation, with Gemini built more deeply into the laptop experience and Android apps no longer sitting behind the same emulation layer.

Read more
Googlebook laptops will come in multiple chip options beyond just Intel, and that’s a relief
More chips, more choices. Google is giving Googlebook buyers real hardware flexibility from day one.
Googlebook

After Google's bombastic Android Show, where the company unveiled tons of new features, Google VP John Maletis sat down with Chrome Unboxed to talk Googlebook. The interview contains several nuggets of information, and one of the most reassuring confirmations we got was about the chips powering these new laptops. 

Maletis said that Google is working with Intel, Qualcomm, and MediaTek, meaning the platform won't live or die by a single silicon provider. For anyone who has followed the Chromebook space for a while, this is genuinely good news.

Read more