They are made out of MLC chips and are aimed at enterprise systems

Sep 24, 2013 13:14 GMT  ·  By

Enterprises and industrial organizations around the world may not be totally sold on the idea of solid-state drives yet, but it's things like OCZ's new Deneva 2 SSDs that are slowly eroding their resistance.

Said solid-state drives are 2.5-inch units made out of 19 nm MLC (multi-level cell) NAND Flash memory chips.

They communicate over SATA III, predictably enough (anything below 6 Gbps would have done the fast storage type disfavors).

When putting together the Deneva 2, OCZ implemented a new power architecture, designed from the ground up to reduce power fluctuation and most other pitfalls associated with the use of electricity in solid-state chips.

Sales should already be underway, for varying prices based on capacity (120 GB, 240 GB, 480 GB) and amount of drives needed by those making the order.