SuperTalent shows off sub-$20 USB3 drives

CES 2011 Leftovers: New storage goodie large and small

SUPERTALENT WAS SHOWING off a bunch of new products at CES, some of which are on the market, others not. The lineup had something for everyone, from sub-$20 USB3 drives to high end RAID cards.

The first one we saw was the highest end product, the RAIDDrive R2S. This has nothing to do with the older USB3 RAIDDrives, the new one is a PCIe 8x card. There was an older version of the PCIe RAIDDrive shown off here and there, but that was canceled, replaced with a new less expensive model that lacks the metal case and fan.

RAIDDrive R2S

Note the 8 SSDs in this beast

Internally, the drive is simply 8 SSDs with Sandforce controllers, all connected through a full blown RAID card. Officially the card will hit 230K IOPS, more than good enough for casual home use. Or enterprise loads. Or anything in between.

StoragePods

StoragePod Mini on a StoragePod

From there, things went back to the consumer space with two new products, the StoragePod and the StoragePod Mini. They are both external USB HDs, the Mini has a USB3 SSD inside while the bigger one is a magnetic drive. A 2.5″ magnetic HD won’t max a USB2 connection, so USB3 was probably left out to lower the price. USB3 external SSDs are looking to be quite the geek ‘in’ gift this spring.

SuperTalent has been pushing the bounds of how low a USB3 flash drive can go, and they managed to drive more cost out of them once again. How low can they go? How about under $20 for an 8GB USB3 memory stick. If that seems like a lot, don’t worry, you will probably find them for under $15 retail if you look. They aren’t the prettiest things out there, very plain, and they lack caching, but will push 67MBps for next less money than many USB2 sticks. How can you go wrong with one of these?

As is all the rage recently, SuperTalent now has an encrypted memory stick called the DataGuardian. The encryption is all hardware based, so no drivers and no easily bypassing the security. They range from 4-16GB, are USB2 based, and are available now.

Pico USB3 drive

Tiny but fast

Moving on to smaller items, we have a prototype for a new Pico drive, SuperTalent’s tiny memory sticks. If you were wondering how small you can make a USB3 flash stick, there is your answer, really small. It won’t be the fastest thing in the world, but it is likely to come in sizes up to 64GB, and you can fit a few hundred of them in to a reasonably sized pocket. I want one to replace the old USB2 Pico on my keychain.S|A

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Charlie Demerjian

Roving engine of chaos and snide remarks at SemiAccurate
Charlie Demerjian is the founder of Stone Arch Networking Services and SemiAccurate.com. SemiAccurate.com is a technology news site; addressing hardware design, software selection, customization, securing and maintenance, with over one million views per month. He is a technologist and analyst specializing in semiconductors, system and network architecture. As head writer of SemiAccurate.com, he regularly advises writers, analysts, and industry executives on technical matters and long lead industry trends. Charlie is also available through Guidepoint and Mosaic. FullyAccurate