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Texas Memory Joins Linux Foundation

To support SSDs

Texas Memory Systems designs and builds solid state storage systems for accelerating enterprise applications. It uses the PCI-e Solid State Drives (SSDs) to provide solutions to the IT industry that allow for scalable, low latency messaging with high throughput. These requirements are found today in financial services, social networking and other High Performance Computing (HPC) environments.

Instead of a rotating mechanical disk, SSD uses memory chips (typically DDR RAM or Flash Memory) to read and write data. These drives eliminate the mechanical limitations and latency of hard disk drives and allow storage speeds to catch up with the speed of today’s processors, thereby improving performance and productivity. With SSD, applications can accommodate more concurrent users and simultaneous transactions and can be more economical than adding monolithic RAID, servers, RAM, or constant application tuning.

Texas Memory Systems will work with The Linux Foundation and the Linux kernel community to help ensure that its SSDs are supported in the mainline kernel, which benefits Texas Memory Systems’ customers using Linux who will have support for their drives ‘out-of-the-box.’ The company’s efforts to upstream the Linux driver for supporting PCI-e SSD drives are part of an industry effort it is leading to ensure all storage manufacturers have support for new storage devices in the mainline Linux kernel.

"Linux is key to our long-term success," said Jamon Bowen, Director of Sales Engineering, and Texas Memory Systems. "There is an enormous amount of innovation within the open source community, primarily driven through collaborative development. Texas Memory Systems wants to help accelerate that work in order to meet both the needs of the community and customers who need advanced high-performance SSDs in a variety of IT environments."

"Texas Memory Systems is pushing the limits on enterprise storage and support," said Amanda McPherson, vice president of marketing and developer programs, The Linux Foundation. "Solid State Drives are the future of data storage, and The Linux Foundation is eager to work with leaders like Texas Memory Systems to optimize this technology for Linux."

The Linux Foundation’s membership is made up of thousands of individual and corporate members, as well as affiliates. The aggregate contributions from these members advance the operating system to compete in the enterprise and on next-generation computing devices.

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