No disagreements there but there is no denying what you just said but then again will never bother looking at a new launched OCZ product. If its me I will wait for at least 2 revisions.Hi guys just my 2 cents here.
OCZ does have many reported BSODs in their forums. This is public knowledge no one can deny it. A likely reason being they are the first to have access to the latest SandForce controllers before other brands. Likewise OCZ is also the fastest to release Firmware updates due to their priority access and close working relationship with Sandforce. I have been informed that OCZ engineers in fact share firmware tweaks and advice to the Sandforce team. I know this since I am a OCZ partner but there is no public information to prove this.
Till date almost all SSD manufacturers have faced their own issues (Intel, Crucial, OCZ, Samsung too in their early days when OCZ had used their controller in the Summit series). No one can declare which brand is 100% trouble free. Consumer SSD technology is only about 5 years old vs HDD which has been around since 1960 (consumer HDD only became affordable in late 1980s Hard disk drive - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia). Understandably HDD is going to be more trouble-free with so much time for the technology to mature.
Hope this proves insightful to all who understand or are new to SSDs. Ultimately its your choice of brand. Information is widely available online its just how you draw your own conclusions![]()
Fastest to release firmware upgrades is also a double edged sword. With OCZ acquisition of Indilinx I am pretty sure that big things to come from them. But against the big boys like Micron , Intel and Samsung. Pretty soon it will become clear that price point will be the only competitive factor and OCZ has been proving only 1/2 decent in that department.
OCZ's Octane solid-state drive arrived with one major question mark; can it make the Indilinx Everest controller a viable alternative to the established solutions from the likes of Marvell and SandForce?
The answer's yes, but it isn't quite as clear cut as that. SandForce drives still have the edge in terms of raw throughput, Marvell-driven SSDs have proven to be strong all rounders, and the Octane - albeit equally potent in certain scenarios - isn't any cheaper and needs to undercut the competition to truly stand out.
As a home-user upgrade, the 128GB, SATA 6Gbps model will deliver an instant jolt of speed that's consistent irrespective of the data type in use, and it's well worthy of consideration for that purpose alone. But less-than-stellar write speeds - particularly at high queue depths - prevent the drive from being a great all-rounder.
And then there's the issue of tried-and-trusted reliability. Drives based on Marvell and SandForce controllers have been available for some time, and both have benefited from firmware updates that introduced greater performance and stability. The relatively-new Octane, and its underlying Indilinx Everest controller, remains something of an unknown entity.
Really right now there are many companies in the same ball game with sorry to say similar controllers with different ram chips and different marketing strategies that's all. I am still waiting for OCZ to finally come good with Indilinx controllers.
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