kingston.com/flash
Kingston’s engineers test and select high- performance controllers to ensure that Kingston’s flash cards are among the performance leaders in the industry.
•Small Physical Size (or Form Factor): Flash storage devices are designed to be easily transported. Convenience is an important criterion, especially for consumer and corporate applications.
•High Data Reliability: Flash memory is very reliable and many of the flash storage device types also include Error Correction Code (ECC) checking to detect single- bit errors. For example, Kingston’s CompactFlash® cards have a rated error specification of less than one (1) bit in 1,000,000,000,000,000 bits read (1 bit per 1015 bits read).
•Kingston Flash Data Retention: Kingston flash storage devices are rated for up to 10 years under normal use. Important information should also be backed up on other media for
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•Flash Cell Endurance: Up to 10,000 Multi- Level Cell (MLC) Flash or up to 100,000
According to Toshiba, the inventor of flash memory: “the 10,000 cycles of MLC NAND is more than sufficient for a wide range of consumer applications, from storing documents to digital photos. For example, if a 256MB MLC NAND Flash- based card can typically store 250 pictures from a
For USB flash drives, Toshiba calculated that a 10,000 write cycle endurance would enable customers to “completely write and erase the entire contents once per day for 27 years, well beyond the life of the hardware.”
SLC flash based products, typically found in Kingston’s Elite Pro™ cards and DataTraveler 2.0 USB flash drives, offer both
•Automatic Bad Sector Remapping: Kingston flash controllers automatically lock out sections with bad memory cells (“bad blocks”) and move the data to other sections (“spare blocks”) to avoid data corruption. During factory formatting (as described in Section 2), spare blocks are set aside on the flash storage device for remapping bad sectors over time.
1* Toshiba press release, “Toshiba America Electronic Components, Inc. Releases |
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Performance Research on MLC NAND Flash Memory for Consumer Applications,” | C O M M I T T E D TO M E M O R Y | |
May 10, 2004 | ||
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