The test article on solid state Drive [SSD] If you are not familiar to computer jargons, you will not much appreciate the term - Solid State Drive. By solid state, you recount the three physical states of matter, namely - Solid, Liquid and Gaseous. And by drive, you realize that it has to do with driving a railway engine or a car. Well, in computer terminology, Drive is is a type of low-cost, high-capacity physical storage used for random-access data. And by Solid state, you refer to electronic components, devices, and systems based entirely on the semiconductor which have no moving parts. This feature distinguishes SSD from traditional magnetics discs such as HDDs or floppy discs. Thus an SSD (solid-state drive or solid-state disk) is a nonvolatile storage device that stores persistent data on solid-state flash memory. In 1976, DATARAM first introduced SSD technology, which was extremely costly, then. A 2MB capacity SSD had a price tag of Rs. 24 lakhs. Significant capacity boost to 45MB was priced at 1.5 Million USD or whooping almost Rs. ten crores. It was obviously beyond a common man. Intel made a significant breakthrough when they marketed their Apple II Bubble Memory at just Rs. 60,000 or USD 895 and had a capacity of 128 kb. It had the most important feature of NOT losing its memory when power was switched off. In 1988 came Intel Flash SSD with 16MB data capacity NOR chips. They were priced USD 5000 (INR 3.25 lakhs) During 1995, one GB capacity storage could come at US