Back at Flash Memory Summit I had the opportunity to meet with all the key people at SanDisk. There is a lot going on at SanDisk at the moment with the Fusion-io acquisition, TLC NAND, and other things, so I figured I would write a piece that outlines SanDisk's current situation and what they're planning for the future.

I'll start with the client side. For SanDisk the big topic at this year's Flash Memory Summit was TLC NAND and we were given a sneak peek of the SanDisk Ultra II back at the show, which was then released a few weeks later. Since we have already reviewed the Ultra II, I'm not going to talk about the drive itself and its technical merits, but there are a few things that Kevin Conley, senior vice president and general manager for SanDisk's client business brought up about TLC and the client market in general.

I'm sure most of our long-time readers remember how SSD prices plummeted between 2010 and 2012. The reason for that wasn't a breakthrough in NAND technology, but merely the fact that all manufacturers increased their manufacturing capacity with the expectation of exponential NAND demand growth. As you can see in the graph above, the industry bit growth was over 60% year-over-year between 2010 and 2012, which lead to oversupply in the market and deflated the prices.

The reason why all NAND manufacturers invested so heavily on capacity increases was the popularity of smartphones and tablets; it was expected that the average storage capacity would increase over time. Basically, the NAND manufacturers assumed that decreases in NAND prices due to smaller lithographies would translate to higher capacity smartphones and tablets, but in fact the mobile companies chose to save on onboard storage and invest in other components instead (camera, SoC, etc.).

It's only been recently that smartphone and tablet manufacturers have started to increase the internal NAND and offer higher capacity models (e.g. the 128GB iPhone 6/6+), but even today the majority of devices are shipping with 16GB, which is the same capacity that the low-end iPhone 3GS had when it was introduced in 2009. Of course a large reason for the reduced sales of higher capacity smartphones/tablets has a lot to do with pricing, where 32GB devices often cost $100 more than the 16GB model.

Since the NAND manufacturers are now adding fab space at a slower pace, they are looking for alternate ways to increase bit growth and scale costs down – and that's where TLC kicks in. Because TLC packs in 50% more bits than MLC (three bits per cell instead of two), increasing the share of TLC production is an efficient way to boost bit growth without additional fab investments.

Currently about 45-50% of SanDisk's NAND production is TLC and by next year TLC will be overtaking MLC in terms of production volume. Note that SanDisk will have 3D NAND ready in 2016, so the graph doesn't imply that SanDisk will move to TLC-only production in 2017 – it is just the 2D NAND production moving to TLC since it will mostly be used in applications like USB flash drives and other low cost devices, while 3D NAND will be used in SSDs.

TLC will also be one of the driving forces behind average capacity increase. The main obstacle in SSD adoption is obviously the cost per gigabyte, and the lower production costs of TLC will help to bring the prices down. I think it's too early to say what kind of impact TLC will have on prices because currently there are only two drives available (SanDisk's Ultra II and Samsung's 840 EVO), but once more OEMs are ready with their TLC SSDs later this year and early next year, I believe we will see more aggressive pricing.

One of SanDisk's presentations at the show had a very interesting slide about the company's internal SSD deployment program. The question that is often debated when it comes to SSD endurance is the number of gigabytes that a user writes per day. There aren't really any studies with large sample sizes, but SanDisk's own study provides an interesting insight into typical office workloads.

What the data shows is that a typical office user only writes about 7GB per day on average and the number of people that write over 20GB is only a few percent, so very few users actually need more endurance than what TLC SSDs can offer (~20GB/day). Of course, everyone's usage is different and I doubt SanDisk's data takes e.g. media professionals properly into account, but it is still interesting and valuable data nonetheless.

Another thing I discussed with SanDisk was the obstacles for higher SSD adoption rate. While there is growth, the attach rate in the consumer space is still fairly modest and will remain as such for the next few years at least. Price is obviously one of the most important factors as hard drives are still an order of magnitude cheaper when measured in price per gigabyte, but I'm not sure if absolute price and capacity are the only hurdles anymore. I mean, 256GB is more than sufficient for the majority of users – especially now that we live in the era of Netflix and Spotify – and at ~$100 it's fairly affordable, so I think we have reached a point where the price is no longer the barrier preventing users from upgrading to SSDs.

This is actually the part where we ask for your, our readers, help. What is it that we or manufacturers like SanDisk could do to boost the SSD penetration in the market? Would live demonstrations at malls and other public places help? Or upgrade programs where you could take your PC to a store and they would do the upgrade there for you? Let us know your ideas in the comment section below and I'll make sure to bring them up with SanDisk and other SSD manufacturers. Remember that we are talking about the masses here, so think about your parents for instance – what would it take for them or other people who are not very comfortable around computers to upgrade their PCs with an SSD?

The one huge problem is of course the PC OEMs and convincing them to adopt SSDs for mainstream laptops. The race to the bottom practically killed the profits in the PC industry, which is why most of the mainstream (~$400-600) laptops have such a bad user experience (low-res TN panels, cheap plastic chassis, etc...). With already razor thin margins, the OEMs are very hesitant about increasing the BOMs and taking the risk of cutting their already-near-zero margins with SSDs. I know SanDisk and other SSD OEMs have tried to lobby SSDs to the PC OEMs as much as possible, but anything that adds cost gets a highly negative response from the PC OEMs.

The Enterprise & Final Words
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  • cjs150 - Friday, December 5, 2014 - link

    Complete agree. My 6TB NAS is starting to feel a bit small.

    As for cloud and streaming, this is what the industry wants not necessarily what consumers want. There are many places where there is no or limited access to the cloud and mobile networks are not going to reduce data transmission costs sufficiently anytime soon
  • hojnikb - Friday, December 5, 2014 - link

    Nothing is forcing you not to buy extra storage. But for lots of people 128GB/256GB is more than plenty.
  • Spawne32 - Friday, December 5, 2014 - link

    If you don't want to listen to what people are telling you is the problem, I don't know what to tell you. Cloud storage is not "mainstream" by any sense of the word. It is something that the younger generation of users are just starting to embrace, but for the vast majority of us, we would rather keep our information stored locally then over a network for security reasons alone, not to mention the fact that cloud storage can be costly. The average user has roughly 500gb of information stored on their computer between games, photos and music, that would not be traded off for cloud storage. Yet the price of a 500gb SSD is still between 175 to 200 dollars.
  • piiman - Saturday, December 6, 2014 - link

    "cloud storage can be costly."
    And it's SLOOOOOWWWW why even compare the two.
    One is a drive for active files and games one is for inactive and seldom accessed files.

    You want to make SSD's more popular? Get the price and size to match HDD's and you're golden.
  • Shadow Cat - Wednesday, January 7, 2015 - link

    I agree with piiman, commercial cloud storage is not a sensible option.

    As long as SSDs stay at the back end of storage capacity race, they will stay at the bottom of the consumer adoption rate.
  • amddude10 - Sunday, December 7, 2014 - link

    True, although it's nice to have at least two drives, so that you can backup important things much more quickly and conveniently than using cloud services.
  • amddude10 - Sunday, December 7, 2014 - link

    Yep, I've got a 2TB and a 1TB drive plus a 256GB SSD, and I find that I keep needing to go through my files and deleting them to make space every couple of months now. I could definitely use another drive.
  • groundhogdaze - Friday, December 5, 2014 - link

    Games are taking a lot more space nowadays. Recent games can take 30-50GB each. My STEAM library alone is already 1.5TB and I haven't even installed all the games I've owned yet which probably bring it closer to 3TB of games.
  • Sabresiberian - Saturday, December 6, 2014 - link

    It's an easy thing for those of us that have reliable and fast internet service to say, but the fact is a large portion of the population has neither. I think we are still a decade or two away from that being a reality.
  • Wwhat - Sunday, December 7, 2014 - link

    I know of a few adult non-IT women who do use plenty of storage. And they normally don't like the cloud at all and have internetspeeds that really make the cloud a silly proposition. For clouds to even start replacing drives you'd need people to be a) really out of the loop and stupid regarding privacy issues b) people must have at least fiber and with equal up and download speeds.

    The cloud at this moment is a dumb illusion some poorly managed companies try to bet on.

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