Samsung stakes claim to world’s biggest SSD title — 32TB SAS
The 32TB drive, yet to be named, will be available next year. Pricing is yet to be confirmed, but we wouldn’t expect it to cost less than $20K.

The difference is in the form factor (2.5-inch for Samsung and 3.5-inch for Seagate), and the fact that it uses its own 512-gigabit chips, compared to 384-gigabit Micron-sourced chips for Seagate. So while Seagate has the highest capacity, Samsung has the bragging rights when it comes to data density (which is ultimately what counts). The drive uses Samsung’s new fourth-generation V-NAND stack, which boosts the number of layers to 64, enabling the production of 512-gigabit chips. Samsung also confirmed that it expects 100TB SSD to be available by 2020, although depending on market conditions we could reach that capacity far faster, especially if Samsung plans to produce a 3.5-inch version of the drive.
The 32TB drive, which is yet to be named, will be available next year. Pricing has yet to be confirmed, but we wouldn’t expect it to cost less than $20,000 given that a 15.36TB model from Samsung costs just under $10,000.
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