So much to comment on.. and so little time to do it. That's good for you guys though since it keeps my posts well below 1,000 words. lol
Also nice to see that many folks around here are seeing bigger pictures these days and looking at the tech.. moreso than the company. Personally owning well more than 20 of thier drives, plus having installed them in almost a dozen other machines without issue(although some required using known workarounds to circumvent many of the problems caused by Sandforce's/Intel's earlier power mgmt and firmware/driver evolution).. I can completely agree with some of the other comments about "statistics..shmatistics". Speculating about others issues(especially the assumption that you know EXACTLY why they even had the issues in the first place).. or the stockmarket.. won't get you very far if you want to be on the cutting edge of this tech.
Nuff said, and here's some more input from an actual Vector owner.
This drive is VERY nice and oozes quality when you take it out of the package. Now while some may say "who cares if the thing weighs twice as much as "x brand" SSD".. I can tell you without doubt that initial impression can be very important when you pay hundreds of $$$ for a product. Even those who know absolutly nothing about the tech inside will not feel all warm and fuzzy if the thing feels like a feather and has a plastic casing. Not to mention now we get to see more youtube vid's of people torture testing them by dropping them from building tops.. or parking cars on them. lol
Then there's the performance levels associated with top-line drives like these. Pretty much a no brainer for those who are wanting the best performance for thier rigs. To really understand the gains to be had from these particular drives in comparison to other "fast SSD's".. all one has to do is fill the thing up a bit too much(you know who you are) and watch how the drive maintains its "like new" performance. Not many firmwares will do that and the few that can are dog slow in comparison to this one(some of which are only sata2). Especially important metric for cash/space limited laptop owners to consider, of course. More bang for the buck to be sure.
As for potential bugs and rushing to market? Nope.. not this time boys and girls. In fact.. I've never seen a drive from OCZ that has progressed through the testing stages as smoothly as this one has. IMHO, much of this has more to do with native platform and driver maturity than it does with this particular firmware. but there's an obvious capatilization effect going on here of learning from previous mistakes and implementation of much more mature firmware compatability standards. Quite simply.. many of the growing pains have subsided at this juncture.
Couple of HBA screens to see what the drive can do.
LSI 9211
Highpoint 2720
You don't get the big caching performance that the native 6G chipsets do.. but it sure ain't slow.