Braidwood to be Intel made

One of our sources has given us some more details with regards to Intels upcoming Braidwood Turbo Memory modules and from our understanding, this is an entirely new ballgame compared to what Intel offered last time around.

For starters, it wasnt clear if the P55 chipset was going to get support for Braidwood or not, but this has now been confirmed and its most likely part of the changes that were made to the chipset. However, this doesnt mean all motherboard manufacturers will add support for Braidwood modules on their motherboards, as this will increase the cost of the boards to a certain degree. Were hearing that at least one of the big motherboard makers might not offer Braidwood support at all, on any of their P55 models.

The modules themselves are said to come in 4, 8 and 16GB sizes, with the two larger sizes having the option to be used as boot drives. Again, at least initially, this option will be reserved for large system integrators, but Intel should be releasing a tool that will allow anyone to do this on their own at a later stage. Unlike Turbo Memory which used fairly slow flash memory, the Braidwood modules will get the same kind of flash memory you find in Intels SSD drives. This should allow for vastly improved performance, but were still curious how much of a performance improvement Braidwood will offer.

Our source told us that if youre running a RAID 0 configuration and add a Braidwood module to the mix, you should get performance that isnt far off that of an SSD drive, although we presume this will be a consumer level MLC SSD and not some of the faster, more expensive SLC SSDs.

Its also interesting to note that although Intel has based Braidwood on the open ONFI standard, at least initially, Intel wont license Braidwood. Instead Intel will be making all the Braidwood modules with a possible option being that Intel will do some co-branding, as it has done with its SSD products. This would mean all profit for Intel and lower risks in the channel, especially as there wont be any competition.

Pricing is as yet an unknown factor to take into consideration, especially as the price of SSD drives keep dropping. Until we have some performance figures as well as pricing at hand, its hard to tell if this will be another flop for Intel like Turbo Memory, or a roaring success

If you enjoyed this post, please consider to leave a comment or subscribe to the feed and get future articles delivered to your feed reader.

Comments

No comments yet.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.