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SSDs were offered in the late 1980s by Zitel as a family of DRAM-based products, under the name “RAMDisk”, for use on systems like UNIVAC and Perkin-Elmer. In 1999, several introductions and announcements were made by BiTMICRO, about flash-based SSDs, including a 3.5-inch, 18GB SSD. In 2007, a PCIe-based Solid state drive was announced by Fusion-io. It had a capacity of doing about 100, 000 I/O operations per second (IOPS) of performance in a single card, with storage capacities up to 320 GB.
The full form of SSD is Solid State Drive. SSD does not use Mechanical Components like HDDs. HDDs use Disks to store and retrieve data by revolving very fast at about 5400rpm or 7200rpm, but SSDs use chips to store and retrieve data. SSDs are faster than HDDs because the speed of HDD depends upon the rate of revolution of the disks contained inside, whereas SSDs have no such concept of disks.
There are 2 components of SSD and are as follows:
Flash memory is widely used to store data and code and is used in embedded systems to store information on a solid-state flash drive containing a drive for storage. The SSD has interlinked chips of flash memory that are made of silicon. Thus, to accomplish different densities, SSDs are developed by stacking chips in a grid.
Flash Controller is an in-built microprocessor that handles operations. It also monitors control between SSD and the host machine for I/O (input/output) and R/W (read/write) functions.
They have no moving parts, resulting in fast boot times and operations with less read/write delay while using data transfer rates much higher than conventional HDDs. NVMe SSD offer a number of other enhancements in performance comparisons to the PATA or SATA standards 3840MB/s. However, SSDs remain worthwhile investment for users aiming to improve their efficiency and reliability in storage offerings even though they are more expensive with less capacity per price than HDDs. Surely, as technology progresses further in the future, SSDs will be used more widely within modern computing creating a strong foothold having been stamped down by an essential component of our digital landscape.