News about SATA
  • SATA 6.0 Gb/s rollout delayed

    Triple-whammy. PC Perspective is reporting that a trifecta of motherboard manufacturers--ASUS, Gigabyte, and MSI--are all using the exact same SATA 6.0 Gb/s controller into their upcoming P55-chipset motherboards. Only said controller, Marvell's 88SE9123, is suffering from a few problems that are causing at least two of the three vendors to pull the controller from their motherboards. Consequently, said products will ship without support for the SATA 6.0 Gb/s connection specification.

    By David Murphy | 16 July, 2009 04:19

    Tags: SATA, storage

  • Apple issues fix for MacBook Pro SATA interface

    In an apparent response to user complaints, Apple Inc., today released a firmware upgrade that it said fixes an issue with the drive interface in new MacBook Pros.

    By Lucas Mearian | 23 June, 2009 10:36

    Tags: Apple, apple macbook, macbook pro, SATA

  • SATA 3.0 released, solid state drives rejoice

    We've seen glimmers on the horizon for some time now, but the Serial ATA International Organization (SATA-IO) has finally made official the third iteration of the serial ATA specification. SATA Revision 3.0 doubles the existing SATA 3Gb/s bandwidth to 6Gb/s, or roughly 600 MB/s, using a connector that's fully backwards-compatible with the older specification. Device manufacturers (especially motherboards) won't have to reinvent the wheel connection-wise, which should help the new specification reach full market acceptance in a short time frame.

    By David Murphy | 29 May, 2009 03:43

    Tags: SATA, sata 3.0, storage

  • SATA 3.0 spec cleared, doubles drive data speed

    The Serial ATA International Organization today released the SATA Revision 3.0 specification, which doubles data transfer speeds from 3Gbit/sec. to 6Gbit/sec.

    By Lucas Mearian | 28 May, 2009 08:57

    Tags: hard-disk drives, IDC, SATA

  • SSDs to stick with SATA 'for quite a while'

    Intel's next-generation interface for solid-state drives (SSD) promises to make them faster and last longer, but laptops will continue to use the Serial ATA (SATA) interface in the near-term, say two leading vendors' executives.

    By Eric Lai | 12 November, 2008 08:38

    Tags: SATA, solid state drives, SSD

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