Read more.SRIS BIOS development should mean read/write speeds of up to 745/809MB/s.
Read more.SRIS BIOS development should mean read/write speeds of up to 745/809MB/s.
Interesting, seems these should be compatible with M.2 interfaces as well.
Main PC: Asus Rampage IV Extreme / 3960X@4.5GHz / Antec H1200 Pro / 32GB DDR3-1866 Quad Channel / Sapphire Fury X / Areca 1680 / 850W EVGA SuperNOVA Gold 2 / Corsair 600T / 2x Dell 3007 / 4 x 250GB SSD + 2 x 80GB SSD / 4 x 1TB HDD (RAID 10) / Windows 10 Pro, Yosemite & Ubuntu
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Second link to SATA Express take me through to some article on a Samsung camera...
(http://www.nextpowerup.com/news/8410...on-camera.html)
Looks like an interesting idea but hopefully a stop gap for the next SATA standard?
mtyson (24-04-2014)
This is the next SATA standard. Reasons why this direction for SATA was chosen is covered on the Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SATA_Express
link is fixed now
I wonder if this(SATA Express) will show up on AMD platforms next year? Maybe with Excavator?
Thanks for the link. The original link I clicked on wasn't working and I was too busy at the time to investigate further. Bit sad it is the new standard. Would have preferred something more compact (Looks like an old P-IDE cable!) and ideally using the existing connector as is. Hopefully SATA 4 will fix this....
yeah the socket design is a bit on the weird side of things, it just takes up far too much space on a motherboard, meaning the odds are that most companies will use the 'shared' socket approach where you can use it for sata 3 or sata express.
Also if you think about it the speeds being mentioned by Asus are actually pretty poor when you consider you've basically got 2 sata 3 sockets (space wise if nothing else) being used together which could be closer to 1200MB/s based on current sata 3 drives in raid 0....
Now assuming the premium that the sata express drive will likely have it might end up being cheaper to put 2 sata 3 drives in raid 0 if you don't mind the risk of losing data or space in your case.
There was an article about this a while back here:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7843/t...ress-with-asus
There's no advantage over using PCI-E, and it'd just mean taking more PCI-E lanes away. So I'd just like to see more PCI-E SSDs.
Pretty much. For desktops, you tend to have a spare PCIe slot or two free, and for laptop/compact desktops, there's the SFF versions. For what I've read, it isn't really any difference to just using PCIe directly on the logical level, so it seems to me more like a backwards-compatibility thing?
There are some differences to SATA 'proper' though, like the lack of the abstraction layer, and they require their own BIOS which can cause compatibility issues with being able to boot from them on certain systems.
As it says in the Wiki though, 'SATA4' might still be years away and will probably double SATA3 performance, which is less than you get with PCIe native/SATAe.
Edit: missed LSG501's post, was replying to kalniel.
@LSG501: mitx systems could just use the SFF versions of SSDs like laptops, which is even more convenient than trying to cram a 2.5" SSD and associated cables into a tiny case.
I just CANNOT understand the point of this. It's just an ugly cobbled together socket. If you want more bandwidth then connect directly to PCI-E, SATA is a bottleneck. There's no point in having a Frankenstein's monster connector for the sake of backwards compatibility either. We should have a PCI-E cable connector for future drives and/or peripherals, and motherboards can still include a SATA chip and ports for older SSDs (which won't see any benefit from SATA Express anyway) and the disk drives that people are increasingly not using.
Life is like a hair on a toilet seat. Sooner or later you're bound to get pissed off!
If there was a demand for it, e.g. large SATA connector or PCIe SSDs becoming commonplace, that could change rapidly.
AFAIK you can't connect any form of drive directly to a PCIe lane, you need something between the two doing the translation.
SATAe is mainly for backward compatibility, it incorporates two normal SATA connectors that can be used to connect two SATA I, II, III drives, or one SATAe drive.
Given the choice i would prefer a MoBo with 2-3 SATAe connectors giving me the choice of using 2-3 SATAe drives or 4-6 normal SATA drives. Versus a MoBo with a single M.2 connector and 4-6 SATA III connectors.
intel is pushing its own propriety tech . again.
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