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Hellhammer

Moderator emeritus
Original poster
Dec 10, 2008
22,164
582
Finland
http://www.techpowerup.com/137314/N...s-Full-SSD-Performance-in-1-8th-the-Size.html

Only 40GB and 80GB though but it's great to see that m-SATA is being adopted by such big company. Maybe m-SATA is the future? No need to waste space with casings and stuff when a stick like that does the job too. Those should fit in MBA but there is no place for the screws.

157b.jpg

157d.jpg


Apple's SSD

D1ZOQhUjgbSgkfFE.huge
 

KPOM

macrumors P6
Oct 23, 2010
18,311
8,324
This is good to hear. That should mean that there will be a nice replacement SSD market for the MacBook Air. It should also mean that these drives will become commonplace.
 

Thiol

macrumors 6502a
Jan 26, 2008
693
0
Actually, I'm checking the Intel specs, and they say the dimensions are (newsroom.intel.com/servlet/.../Intel_SSD_310_Series_Product_Brief.pdf):

"Full-sized m-SATA form factor (50.80 mm x 29.85 mm)
Less than 4.85 mm thick"

But the toshiba SSDs that fit in the Macbook Air are (http://www.toshiba.com/taec/news/press_releases/2010/memy_10_604.jsp):

64 and 128 GB:
"Width: 24.0 mm
Height: 2.2 mm
Length: 108.9 mm"

256 GB:
"Width: 24.0 mm
Height: 3.7mm
Length: 108.9 mm"

So, unless they are measuring dimensions differently, I have a bad feeling the Intel won't fit in the Macbook Air. Do anyone know more than this?
 

weckart

macrumors 603
Nov 7, 2004
5,976
3,697
These appear to be the same size as the wifi cards found in most laptops and small format computers. Interesting, if Intel can keep the price down.
 
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