If you weren't paying attention during the end of the year build-up to CES 2014, you may have missed LSI's relatively quiet announcement of their new SandForce SF3700 PCIe SSD controller. Okay, so ...
When we look at the SSD industry today, there are few companies more well known than LSI SandForce. LSI SandForce drives power over 35% of the SSDs currently sold on the market today so when these ...
LSI SandForce controllers were the catalyst that helped SSDs evolve from a niche application to the mainstream market we see today. There were precious few SSD's on the market, and even fewer SSD ...
LSI today unveiled the third generation of its market-leading SandForce(R) flash controller line, the industry's most widely deployed flash management technology for driving PCIe(R) and SATA solid ...
LSI demonstrated its latest LSI SandForce flash controller technology innovations at the Flash Memory Summit. LSI has shown some capabilities of the next-generation SandForce SSD controllers as well ...
The long awaited PCIe 3.0 bus has finally arrived and it is more than a bit fashionably late for the enterprise arena. The rush is on for companies such as LSI to deliver a host of storage components ...
Big things are brewing in the land of solid state storage, and if you thought today's SSDs were fast, then prepare to be blown away by what's in store for tomorrow. Keeping the momentum going, LSI ...
In November last year, we gave you a first look at LSI's forthcoming SandForce SF3700 PCI Express SSD Flash controller. It's an impressive silicon integration of both a native PCI Express x4 interface ...
Provides robust performance in a range of applications, supports all data transfer speed modes Designed for easy integration into a RapidChip® Platform ASIC or cell-based ASIC for fast SoC design ...
LSI Logic reported Tuesday it has inked an agreement with Denali Software Inc. to use the Databahn DDR controller intellectual property (IP) to support its RapidChip Platform ASIC and application ...
While I was attempting to find a squeaking case fan, I managed to knock two drives offline and kill the RAID 5 array. It is a 3 disk array of 3Tb WD SATA drives connected to a LSI 9260-8i controller.
I've got a new IBM 15KRPM drive and LSI controller (model LSIU160, based on the 1010 chipset). I run Win2K SP3. Since my motherboard doesn't support differentiating between different off-board storage ...
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