PCI Express has come into our PC industry with huge promises and yes, it has delivered. A single PCI Express x1 lane can deliver double the bandwidth of the PCI bus and it's point to point, no sharing ...
Servers have been the one place that bandwidth has been the ultimate goal. Servers are simply super computers put together in order to handle extremely intense computing tasks. It's not uncommon to ...
We may be dreaming here, and that's a very likely case, but we really believe that solid state is the future. The true future of storage. Many are still trying to figure out what will be the ...
HighPoint Technologies is announcing the RocketRAID 640 series- the industry's fastest SATA 6Gb/s RAID host adapters powered by PCI-Express 2.0 x4 bus speeds. The industry's first 4 port native SATA ...
Wow, my first post. Where to start, SO many questions.<br><br>Let's begin with my IT hopes and dreams:<br><br>I am an (amateur) hardware geek and have been trying to work out the "best" setup for me ...
The Serial SATA International organization said on Thursday that a new specification of SATA ports will standardize PCIe as a choice of interface for client storage and has started the ratification ...
I've got a crappy old sil3114 card that can't do 2TB disks. Looking at the newegg comments for replacement cards and on google, it appears this is a pretty common limitation of the sil3114 based cards ...
The SATA data-transfer standard has served the industry well, but hard drive maker WD has a product that demonstrates the shift to the faster PCI Express tech. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from ...
Marvell announced the launch of its new 88SS1083 PCI Express (PCIe) solid state drive (SSD) controller -a two-lane PCIe Gen2 SSD controller. With performance transfer rates up to 1 GB/s, Marvell's ...
Sure, here is the revised description without the links: --- ssd sata vs M.2 NVMe PCIe 3.0 vs ssd M.2 NVMe PCIe 4.0 vs ssd M.2 NVMe PCIe 5.0 Game Loading Times Games: The Last of Us Part ii - 0:00 S.T ...
You don't need NVMe for everything: Why 'obsolete' SATA drives are still worth it ...