It's just trending down to where the all the other Sandforce-based SSDs are.
Intel has a bit of a stinker here... sure, they tested the hell out of it but they won't say there won't be BSoDs with their Sandforce-based SSDs.
I've been shopping for a couple of weeks for a good 250GB-class SSD to buy a pair of and build into a RAID-0 boot drive. I ended up getting Samsung 830s (typing this from the machine I built today). In the end, it was more about reliability, and Intel simply can't deliver that with this latest generation.
It didn't hurt that I got Batman Arkham City and Ghost 15 with each drive...
At least this mess with Sandforce controllers will finally bring the price of SSDs down to reasonable levels in the next 6 months. They'll continue to push out hardware that will crash until they can figure out what is going on and replace the controller (next-gen). In a way, it's sad... the consumers get potentially screwed here... but as I said, it forces manufacturers to continue cutting prices to unload them on those willing to take a chance.
The thing is, I am replacing a system built on a 2x RAID-0 array of OCZ 60GB Agility drives, and they ran very well, without issue, for over 2 years. The only reason I've built a new system is because the motherboard blew a cap and no longer provides stable CPU voltage (resulting in random shutdowns). Those first sandforce controllers were beasts... fast and reliable. I'm not sure a simple firmware update will fix the 2200 series, from what I've heard.