245TB Micron 6600 ION Data Center SSD Now Shipping

investors.micron.com

71 points by neilfrndes 5 hours ago


speedgoose - 3 hours ago

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

throwaway2037 - 23 minutes ago

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.
nine_k - 4 hours ago

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.

esperent - 4 hours ago

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.

cammikebrown - 4 hours ago

How much is it?

zekrioca - 3 hours ago

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

omeysalvi - 3 hours ago

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?

i_think_so - 28 minutes ago

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

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

WatchDog - 3 hours ago

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

userbinator - 3 hours ago

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.

amelius - 2 hours ago

Data centers are winning.

gigatexal - an hour ago

Cost? Durability? Iops do we know?