Why SLC caches and PCIe lanes actually dictate your NVMe speed ...
Rambus has just announced the availability of its next-gen PCIe 6.0 Interface Subsystem that packs PHY and controller IP, with the latest version of the Compute Express Link (CXL) specification ...
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Fake x16 slots and hidden lane sharing: Why your PCIe NVMe adapter is running at half speed
These adapters might be slowing down your entire PC (but they don't have to) ...
Ever since solid state storage was put on the map, we've seen tremendous strides in storage performance across consumer and enterprise computing uses with the promise of even more to come. With the ...
Delivers data rate of up to 64 GT/s for high-performance workloads Supports the full feature set of PCIe 6.0 with PHY support for CXL 3.0 Offers complete IP solution optimized for latency, power, and ...
A great many developments are shaping the evolution of the data center. Enterprise workloads are increasingly shifting to the cloud, whether these be hosted or colocation implementations. The nature ...
The Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) interface celebrates its 20 th anniversary in 2012. PCI was used for years to accommodate expansion cards inserted into computers to provide additional ...
The Raspberry Pi 4 is the most powerful Raspberry Pi computer to date, and the first to support up to 4GB of RAM. It’s also the first to support USB 3.0 — and the chip that controls USB is connected ...
In the late 1990’s and early 2000’s, the storage data communications world saw a migration from large parallel buses to faster, streamlined serial interfaces. This was particularly evident in disk ...
A little birdy has learned today that Intel is apparently looking to have a new PCI Express interface implemented into future chipsets. And no, it's not to do with PCI-E 3.0 which is already a ...
The PCIe-GPIB is presented as the industry's first GPIB controller card for PCI Express (PCIe). Combining high-performance hardware with a suite of development-tool software, the device enhances ...
This is a sort of "what if?" kind of thing. I've noticed that PCIe 3.0 x16 tops out at 15.75GB/s while DDR3-1600 runs at 12.8GB/s. Aside from having to make an entirely new memory controller, it makes ...
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