"there is no consistent latency measurement in the industry"

You bring up an important point, as did another poster earlier in the thread, 
and certainly its an issue that needs to be addressed.

"I'd be surprised if anyone could answer such a question while simultaneously 
being credible."

http://download.intel.com/design/flash/nand/extreme/extreme-sata-ssd-product-brief.pdf

Intel:  X-25E read latency 75 microseconds

http://www.sun.com/storage/disk_systems/sss/f5100/specs.xml

Sun:  F5100 read latency 410 microseconds

http://www.fusionio.com/PDFs/Data_Sheet_ioDrive_2.pdf

Fusion-IO:  read latency less than 50 microseconds

Fusion-IO lists theirs as .05ms


I find the latency measures to be useful.

I know it isn't perfect, and I agree benchmarks can be deceiving, heck I 
criticized one vendors benchmarks in this thread already :)

But, I did find, that for me, I just take a very simple, single thread, read as 
fast you can approach, and get the # of random access per second, as one type 
of measurement, that gives you some data, on the raw access ability of the 
drive.

No doubt in some cases, you want to test multithreaded IO too, but my 
application is very latency sensitive, so this initial test was telling.

As I got into the actual performance of my app, the lower latency drives, 
performed better than the higher latency drives...all of this was on SSD.

(I did not test the F5100 personally, I'm talking about the SSD drives that I 
did test).

So, yes, SSD and HDD are different, but latency is still important.
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