Save, access and protect the content that matters to you with My Passport™ SSD, giving you read speeds of up to 1050MB/s2 and write speeds of up to 1000MB/s2 with NVMe™ technology
Exhibiting more than just ultra speeds, the MTE250H PCIe SSD delivers unbridled performance, low latency, and high stability for passionate gamers. Built with a PCI Express Gen4 x4 interface, 3D NAND flash, an 8-channel controller, a DRAM cache, and an aluminum heatsink, the MTE250H PCIe SSD is ready to put excellence in your hand.
EMEA Region, Toshiba Storage Solutions - With surveillance systems, nothing but the best is good enough. The Toshiba 3.5-inch S300 is built to meet the highest demands. With support for up to 64 high-resolution surveillance video cameras simultaneously and up to 6 TB capacity, it brings everything into clear view. Each S300 is built with the highest-quality components and has passed rigorous tests to ensure 24 x 7 reliability and performance. That's Toshiba quality you can trust under the harshest working conditions.
The Power of Agility for home, SOHO and SMB NAS enclosures. IronWolf is designed for everything NAS. Get used to tough, ready and scalable 24/7 performance that can handle multi-drive environments with a wide range of capacities.
Upgrade your computer performance to a whole different level with Transcend's PCIe SSD 115S! Boasting the slick PCIe Gen 3x4 interface and slim M.2 2280 size, the PCIe SSD 115S is the perfect speedy and sizable companion for your desktops, laptops, and ultrabooks!
The Serial ATA (SATA) interface provides several advantages over the traditional (parallel) ATA interface. The primary advantages include: easy installation and configuration with true Plug-and-Play connectivity. It is not necessary to set any jumpers or other configuration options. Thinner and more flexible cabling for improved enclosure airflow and ease of installation. Scalability to higher performance levels. In addition, SATA makes the transition from parallel ATA easy by providing legacy software support. SATA was designed to allow users to install a SATA host adapter and SATA disk drive in the current system and expect all of the existing applications to work as normal. The SATA interface connects each disk drive in a point-to-point configuration with the SATA host adapter. There is no master/slave relationship with SATA devices like there is with parallel ATA. If two drives are attached on one SATA host adapter, the host operating system views the two devices as if they were both "masters" on two separate ports. This essentially means both drives behave as if they are Device 0 (master) devices. The SATA host adapter and drive share the function of emulating parallel ATA device behavior to provide backward compatibility with existing host systems and software. The Command and Control Block registers, PIO and DMA data transfers, resets, and interrupts are all emulated.