While the synthetic benchmarks indicate blazing potential, real world performance on a Windows PC is little better than a single fast NVMe drive. That said, it’s a very easy, albeit expensive way to ...
The Sabrent Quad NVMe SSD to PCIe 4.0 x16 Card (EC-P4BF) enables the incorporation of one to four NVMe SSDs via a single x16 PCIe slot adapter. The adapter accommodates M.2 M key SSDs, supporting a ...
The new SSD7540 can take any PCIe 3.0 or PCIe 4.0 SSD at up to 8TB capacities, and up to 8 of them, to provide a simply insane 28,000MB/sec (28GB/sec) transfer speeds ...
Adaptec has announced an all-new, enterprise-grade software-defined storage RAID card that supports up to 32 NVMe SSDs. The new SmartRAID 4300 series supports PCIe 4.0 and 5.0 SSDs with rated ...
If you are considering adding extra storage to your computer, NAS or Thunderbolt expansion system’s PCIe card slot, you might be interested to know that Sonnet has this week unveiled its latest ...
In a move to further disrupt the global storage industry, GRAID Technology announces the release of the SupremeRAIDâ„¢ SR-1010 for PCIe Gen 4, designed to deliver world-class data protection while ...
So, you do need to wonder at what point an NVMe SSD is fast enough. For kicks and giggles and a bit of a viral Gigabyte probably showcased this one, an Aorus PCIe 4.0 SSD that does 15,000 MB/s.
So not sure this is even technically possible, but is it possible to have a PCIe x8 slot card that has 2 NVMe slots and each are available in the UEFI/OS as separate drives? I think I've seen some ...
I have a 285k cpu on a asus z890 max gaming wifi7 board. I know about the gen5 nvme limitations speed wise. Is there an add in board that would allow me to get the full gen5 speed from a gen5 nvme? Or ...
The Sonnet M.2 2x4 Low-Profile PCIe Card adapts available PCIe slots in the Mac Pro to fit two M.2 NVMe solid-state drives. The low-profile x8 adapter means that it can fit into even the tightest of ...
TweakTown is the leading purveyor of RAID 0 reviews, but we haven't done one for a long time. Why? Simply because a bootable SATA based RAID 0 array ceased to make sense after the launch of Intel's ...