History of SSD

History of SSDs:

In 1956, IBM invented the world's first hard disk drive.

In 1968, IBM reintroduced the feasibility of "Winchester" technology, setting the stage for hard disk development.

In 1970, StorageTek (Sun StorageTek) developed the first solid-state hard disk drive.

In 1989, the world's first solid state drive appeared.

In March 2006, Samsung was the first to release a 32GB capacity SSD laptop,

In January 2007, SanDisk released a 1.8-inch 32GB SSD product, followed by a 2.5-inch 32GB model in March.

In June 2007, Toshiba launched its first 120GB SSD laptop.

In September 2008, the official launch of MemoRight SSDs marked the accelerated entry of Chinese companies into the SSD industry.

In 2009, the SSD blowout, major vendors flocked to the storage virtualization formally into a new stage.

In February 2010, Magnesium released the world's first SATA 6Gbps interface SSD, breaking through the 300MB/s read/write speed of the SATAII interface.

At the end of 2010, Renice launched the world's first high-performance mSATA SSD and acquired the patent.

In 2012, Apple applied SSDs with a capacity of 512G to its laptops.

In July 2012, Goldendisk launched the world's first and smallest CFast SSD.

Solid State Drives (Solid State Drives), referred to as Solid Disk, Solid State Drive (Solid State Drive) with solid-state electronic memory chip array and made of hard disk, by the control unit and storage unit (FLASH chip, DRAM chip) composition.

Solid State Drives are identical to ordinary hard drives in terms of interface specifications and definitions, functionality, and usage, as well as in terms of product form factor and size.

It is widely used in military, automotive, industrial control, video surveillance, network monitoring, network terminals, electric power, medical, aviation, navigation equipment and other fields.