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Flash Memory Summit: Adata Focusing on Industrial-Grade SSDs

In particular in PCIe segment

Adata Technology Co, Ltd. confirmed participation in Flash Memory Summit 2017, one of the most important memory and storage trade shows worldwide.

The event is scheduled for August 8-10, taking place in the Santa Clara Convention Center,CA. The company will focus on industrial-grade DRAM and SSDs, in particular the growing PCIe segment. The firm will also exhibit industrial DDR4 as well as SATA SSDs in up to 8TB capacity and drives that use the U.2 form factor.

PCIe on rise
Current industry estimates show that PCIe will surpass SATA as the interface of choice for SSDs by 2020. Constantly evolving, PCIe offers bigger bandwidth than SATA, with lower latency, no cables to manage, and reduced power draw. Even now, PCIe 3×4 drives with the NVMe 1.2 protocol delivers up to 3,000MB/s read and 1,500MB/s write, as shown by the IM2P33E8 industrial SSD. Those speeds are five and three times faster than SATA R/W, respectively. Such growth in performance caters to demand applications, from VR and graphics rendering to IoT and data centers. Ready for this trend, the company has developed a portfolio of PCIe-based SSDs.

All-new capacity milestones
The summit will allow the company an opportunity to display the ISSS381 industrial SSD, a SATA model range with capacities from 1TB to a le 8TB. This will be the biggest capacity of any SSD the firm produced commercially to date, giving businesses and enterprises access to more high speed, durable storage than ever.

U.2: the next small form factor for enterprise users the company will unveil its IU2P338 industrial-grade SSD at Flash Summit 2017. With its U.2 connector and small footprint, the drive is designed for space-constrained enterprise applications. The U.2 plug is expected to become more popular while maintaining compatibility with M.2 through adapters.

Industrial DDR4 goes fast
The company has worked hard to durable DDR4 2666MHz modules that meet the operational requirements while maintaining utmost stability. Until now, industrial-grade DDR4 has been scarce and when available limited to low speeds (max 2,133MHz). The added performance offered by 2,666MHz modules can benefit users.

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