PCIe (Peripheral Component Interconnect Express) is a high-bandwidth expansion bus that allows people to connect things like solid-state drives and graphics cards. Each new generation brings changes ...
What’s changing between PCI Express Gen 5 and Gen 6? Why PCIe Gen 6 is important. What features PCIe Gen 6 brings to the table. PCI Express (PCIe) is ubiquitous and the interconnect for processors and ...
Samsung’s 990 EVO can run at the PCIe 5.0 standard, but it’s Constrained to two lanes (x2) and performs strictly like a PCIe 4.0 SSD. A somewhat pricey, and not particularly fast PCIe 4.0 SSD, at that ...
How PCIe 5.0 technology’s higher speeds introduce new design challenges. How the introduction of precoding in the PCIe 5.0 protocol enhances the robustness of the link. How retimers enable reach ...
Our first look at a PCIe 5.0 host memory buffer design, the Corsair MP700 Elite, revealed significantly upgraded sequential throughput — in benchmarks. It’s a great SSD, but you’re paying a premium ...
The PCIe, or Peripheral Component Interconnect Express standard, has been around for nearly 20 years. It was an upgrade to the earlier PCI bus, developed by Intel and introduced in 1992. The bus ...
The demands on servers at the heart of data centers continue an inexorable rise. Responding to these demands, new platforms keep coming that deliver greater computing performance, have more memory and ...
The PCI Express standard, or PCIe, has been a staple for connecting PC peripherals and components to a desktop. If you buy new PC parts in 2021, they’ll likely support the current fourth generation.
With both Intel and AMD offering PCIe 5 support on their latest motherboards, SSD manufacturers are keen to offer models that peak at up to 14,000MB/sec. Better known for making motherboards and ...