Intel X-25M High Performance solid-state drive, 1st generation (80GB)
As shown: $365.00
See manufacturer site for availability
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: Rich Brown and Justin Yu
- Reviewed on:
The good: Fast transfer speeds; improves laptop battery life; shorter boot times.
The bad: Expensive; low gigabyte-to-dollar ratio.
The bottom line: Intel's X-25M solid-state hard drive enjoys several advantages over both spinning disk drives as well as other SSDs, including improvements to data throughput, boot time, and laptop battery life. Its one drawback is that it's pricier than even its other solid-state competition, but if you can forget about its cost, this is by far the fastest data drive available.
Intel's X-25M solid-state hard drive represents a major leap forward for the solid-state drive category. While we've heard about the benefits of solid-state hard drives for years--faster access and boot times, improved battery life--Intel's drive raises expectations for the category as a whole. You will most definitely have to pay more for it. Intel's official pricing is $595 per 1,000 units for our 80GB model, and actual pricing for individual units is more like $700 at online retailers. That gives this drive the worst gigabyte-to-dollar ratio among competing products. But if improving performance is your ... Expand full review
Intel's X-25M solid-state hard drive represents a major leap forward for the solid-state drive category. While we've heard about the benefits of solid-state hard drives for years--faster access and boot times, improved battery life--Intel's drive raises expectations for the category as a whole. You will most definitely have to pay more for it. Intel's official pricing is $595 per 1,000 units for our 80GB model, and actual pricing for individual units is more like $700 at online retailers. That gives this drive the worst gigabyte-to-dollar ratio among competing products. But if improving performance is your main concern, the Intel X-25M is the clear winner, and we recommend it to those of you for whom price is unimportant..
Instead of storing data on traditional hard disks, solid-state drives use large blocks of flash-based NAND memory, which means these drives have no moving parts to malfunction over time. With no physical platter to spin like traditional hard drives, SSDs are faster at accessing data, and they also use less power and generate less heat, of particular benefit to laptops.
At the time of this review, Intel only offers one 80GB capacity drive, but it's available in 2.5-inch and 1.8-inch sizes for compatibility with a variety of modern desktops and laptops. The Serial ATA data and power inputs on the Intel drive mirror those of other SSDs as well as traditional hard drives, so while you may need drive rails to adapt it to a desktop chassis, the physical cable connections remain unchanged.
As exciting as we find SSDs, and in particular Intel's new model, their limitations are not insignificant to the average consumer. As you can see from our chart below, the price-per-gigabyte of a typical 160GB desktop hard drive is almost 10 times less than that of previous generation SSD drives, and almost 25 times that of Intel's new model. That makes the value proposition for Intel's new SSD, from a pure-gigabytes-per-dollar perspective, very hard to stomach.
| Model | Capacity | Est. street price | Cost per GB |
| Intel X-25M | 80GB | $700 | $8.75 |
| Super Talent MasterDrive MX | 120GB | $435 | $3.63 |
| OCZ Core Series | 128GB | $434 | $3.39 |
| Patriot Warp V.2 | 128GB | $440 | $3.44 |
| Western Digital Caviar | 160GB | $60 | 38 cents |
| Seagate Momentus | 200GB | $80 | 30 cents |
You should also keep in mind that because of the nature of flash memory technology, solid-state hard drives have a relatively well-defined time before failure. An article by Robert Hallock at Icrontic.com called "The Hows and Whys of SSDs" provides a more in-depth, but also accessible description of the issue. The gist is that you get about 100,000 read-write cycles before the memory will wear out. As Hallock puts it, "While 100,000 cycles seems slight, it's more than 100GiB of new information written to the disk every day for five years before approaching failure." Perhaps your drive usage is more demanding, and if so, you'd be wise to weigh it carefully before springing for Intel's expensive new drive.
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Rich Brown wrote his first review, of the CD-ROM game Voyeur, for "PC Magazine" in 1993. He parlayed that acclaim into his current role as a senior editor in charge of CNET's desktop, printer, and peripheral device reviews. He also writes about the occasional present-day game for CNET, despite their confounding lack of FMV.
Justin Yu covers headphones and peripherals for CNET. When he's not scouring eBay for useless ephemera or eating hot dogs for breakfast, he spends his time making fun of Internet culture every morning on The 404 podcast.
User Reviews
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"hmm think we better wait for windows to get it right" By sensibility
Pros: this thing is fast no denying that fact.
Cons: as well this drive will wear fast and die hard..
Summary: i have tried many ssd drives from many makers this is about the same as the rest of them fast quick boot and very cost prohibitive. the real problem i see the constant drive access from, well just about any os, yes linux too. with the MTBF based on many ... Expand full review
"Great Great Great: Go Get It" By ComputeRxLLC
Pros: An amazing drive with solid performance
Cons: Price to Gig ratio is still a bit high but I am glad they are coming down in price.
Summary: If you want performance and reliability, go with an Intel SSD. They are just solid all around drives and after you use one you won't want to go back to a Spindle Drive.
Specifications
See full specsQuick Specs
- Hard drive size: 80 GB
- Storage Hard Drive / Hard Drive Type: Internal hard drive
- Interface type: Serial ATA-300