If you’re wondering where all the storage is going, it’s landed in this 245 TB data center SSD from Micron

Micron, which you may know as one of the biggest players in the memory market, has just released a great big whopping 245 TB SSD specifically designed for data centers. And it feels a little sickening to look at, knowing how expensive my next storage upgrade is going to be.

Entitled the Micron 6600 ION SSD, Micron says it is “the world’s highest capacity commercially available SSD”, and, as you might be able to guess, it’s to support “AI, cloud, enterprise and hyperscale workloads.”

Micron’s new data center SSD not only promises its QLC NAND technology is a generation ahead of any of the competition’s QLC, but, with a 30 watts maximum power rating, it works out to use half the juice of a comparable capacious HDD. SSDs typically consume less power than HDDs anyway, so how power efficient it really is will have to be left to further testing.

What makes this SSD interesting is its humongous storage size. Also, compared to HDD deployment, Micron notes it requires 82% fewer racks. Travis Virgil, the senior vice president of ISG product management at Dell, says, “AI workloads are pushing data center capacity to the limit, and when you can fit significantly more storage into every rack, the math changes: less power, less floor space, less operational overhead.”

The 245 TB model comes with a sequential read of 13,700 MB/S and a sequential write of 3,000 MB/s, but we don’t know the pricing just yet. Chances are, unless you represent a major AI company, that price won’t matter to you anyway.

(Image credit: Micron)

So good news for AI then, but not necessarily anyone else. Storage is hard to come by at reasonable prices nowadays, and that’s all because of AI. The memory crisis is largely caused by AI data centers sapping up all the modules to train new models, and it’s not helped by the fact that there are multiple competing AI companies. They are fighting to get their digital foot in the door at the likes of SK hynix, Samsung, and Micron to secure contracts.

But manufacturers aren’t looking to give contracts easily either. Just today, it was announced that SK hynix is struggling to keep up with ‘unprecedented’ offers, and didn’t necessarily want to agree to any of them, as long-term contracts could require selling memory at a lower rate.

I, on the other hand, found out I had 300 GB in my recycling bin yesterday, so that’s kinda like installing a 245 TB SDD, right?

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