This meant trouble for 3rd party SSD makers like OCZ, whose cheapest high performance drives would now be more expensive than Intel's X25-M. As you'd expect, by forcing prices down, all 3rd party SSD vendors had to react. OCZ shared its new pricing structure with us that should start taking effect in the coming weeks:
OCZ cutting prices of Indilinx SSDs
Posted on Friday, July 24 2009 @ 17:38 CEST by Thomas De Maesschalck
AnandTech reports OCZ has cut prices to counter the launch of Intel's 34nm solid state disks. Under the new price scheme, Intel's SSDs will cost around $2.80 per GB, while the Indilinx MLC disks from OCZ average around $2.43 per GB.