TECH

Lebala li-NVMe SSD, li-drive tse thata tse nang le tšehetso bakeng sa sebopeho li tseleng

Lebala li-NVMe SSD, li-drive tse thata tse nang le tšehetso bakeng sa sebopeho li tseleng

The SATA interface that you’ll find on all current hard drives has a maximum bandwidth of 600MB/s. That’s perfect for a hard drive’s average read speed of 150MB/s, but no match for the SSD e ntle ka ho fetisisa bakeng sa papali with an NVMe interface that can take advantage of the increased bandwidth of a PCIe bus. But, with the recently-announced NVMe 2.0 standard, we could see future hard drives rocking the same connection, as compatibility with HDDs is being added.

Of course, it’s unlikely your current lumbering hard drive would see any advantage over a SATA connection, although with Seagate recently announcing its MACH.2 dual-actuator hard drive with SSD-rivalling speeds, it suggests future faster HDDs also using multiple actuators ka khonang benefit from using an NVMe interface.

It’s not only about speed, as the possibility of NVMe becoming the default interface for all internal storage components could simplify storage server setups. Even so, we reckon we’ll still see SATA ports on the molemo ka ho fetisisa papali motherboard ka lilemo tse tlang.

Sheba sebaka se feletseng

LIHLOOHO TSE BOTSOANG: SSD e ntle ka ho fetisisa ea ho bapala, Mokhoa oa ho theha PC ea papali, CPU ea papali e ntle ka ho fetisisaSehlooho sa pele

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