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Reviews of Intel 2.5 inch X25-E Extreme Series SATA300

Testseek.com have collected 16 expert reviews of the Intel 2.5 inch X25-E Extreme Series SATA300 and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel 2.5 inch X25-E Extreme Series SATA300.
 
(85%)
16 Reviews
Users
(81%)
97 Reviews
85 0 100 16

 

Reviews

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  Published: 2014-02-27, review by: pcper.com

  • Abstract:  Intel has pushed out many SSDs over the years, and unlike many manufacturers, they have never stopped heavily pushing SSD in the enterprise. They did so with their very first push of the X25-M / X25-E, where they seemingly came out of nowhere and ju...

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  Published: 2010-06-29, review by: xbitlabs.com

  • We’ll do some summarizing now, starting from the Intel X25-V. Cutting it short, we like this product. Intel has come up with an affordable but rather fast SSD. It was especially good in our RAID0 array, providing both a large storage capacity and a hig...

 
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  Published: 2009-09-09, review by: xbitlabs.com

  • Abstract:  The Intel X25-E is the fastest model because it is based on SLC rather than on MLC memory as the other tested SSDs. Its capacity is small at 64 gigabytes. That’s about the contents of two Blu-ray discs with movies..

 
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  Published: 2009-07-18, review by: insidehw.com

  • Editor’s Choice Award is the best way to illustrate our impressions of Kinston SSDNow E series. Although Kinston only put its sticker on Intel’s SSD, when it comes to Kingston’s first SSDs this is great first step. Performances are so mu...

 
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  Published: 2009-03-16, review by: phoronix.com

  • Abstract:  With 8GB writes using IOzone and the Phoronix Test Suite, XFS delivered the best performance using Intels flagship SSD series. However, creeping up behind XFS was the EXT4 file-systme while EXT3, ReiserFS, and JFS were all well behind these two. Lik...

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  Published: 2009-02-27, review by: tomshardware.com

  • If you took the time to flip through all of the benchmark pages, then you probably won’t need to read this conclusion to know what were going to say. Intel’s first SSD, the X25-M, which aims at the premium desktop and mobile market, was alread...

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  Published: 2009-02-24, review by: phoronix.com

  • Abstract:  In our last test we have the Flexible IO Tester where we executed a sample Intel IOMeter File Server Access Pattern. It took the Seagate 7200RPM notebook hard drive 88 seconds to complete this sample disk access pattern, but the Intel X25-E had needed...

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  Published: 2008-11-23, Author: Geoff , review by: Techreport.com

  • I had high expectations for the X25-E Extreme, but even those were exceeded by the drives stunning performance. This is without a doubt the fastest solid-state drive weve ever tested, and based on just how much quicker it is than Samsungs FlashSSD, ...

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  Published: 2009-05-06, review by: atomicmpc.com.au

  • Horribly expensive, small storage, but incredibly fast....

 
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  Published: 2009-02-27, review by: tomshardware.co.uk

  • Abstract:  The first solid state drive by Intel was the mainstream X25-M, which we reviewed last September. It is available in capacities of 80 GB and 160 GB, and its performance and power efficiency set new standards for desktop systems and notebooks. However, s...

 
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