“Barefoot” SSD controller pumps up your favorite solid state drive
- August 11th, 2008
- 3 Comments

When you have something as modular as a PC, with all its little bits individually replaceable but still interdependent, it stands to reason that advances in one area might necessitate changes in another. Better video cards demand faster interfaces; thus, PCI Express x16. Faster processors and motherboard functions require more power; thus, more pins on the connector. Now, SSDs are taking over the storage space and your hard drive controller deserves a critical look. After all, the setup and drivers are based on 20 years of working with the limitations of spinning platters, a certain kind of sequential reads, and so on.
Indilinx has been working on (and has finalized) a new controller specifically for SSDs. The new architecture, called Barefoot, has allowed them to reach speeds of 230MB/second, which is twice what a single unit could do last I checked, and getting on towards as much as four could do in RAID-0. Although Memoright and Texas Memory’s RAM-SANs are technically faster, it’s worth noting that both (especially RAM-SAN) are extremely expensive. The Barefoot modules should be more scalable and will get the best out of any SSDs you have lying around up to 512GB. Sounds good to me.
You like that graphic? I pulled out all the stops.







Tdburn (Who am I?)
3 months ago
Any ideas on availability or estimated prices?
Devin Coldewey (Who am I?)
3 months ago
Sorry, I should have mentioned: it’ll be demoed this week and price is unavailable, probably expensive. It’s still in the rolling out into the field phase. Hopefully we’ll get the trickle-down version for our mobos.
Burt Wilson (Who am I?)
2 months ago
Did I get this right, that you can purchase the Barefoot controller on it’s own, and then take out your old controller from your current SSD (like an OCZ Core) and plug in the new one?