Seagate announced today that they are going to reveal a record breaking of the fastest Solid State Drive "SSD", which allows to transfer enough data at a rate of 10 gigabytes per second.
The units will be showcased at the Open Commute Project Summit in San Jose on March 9 2016.
The release of the unit into the markets this summer, is told that it runs 4 gigabytes per second comparing it to other giant industry, which also meets with the energy condition to Facebook's founded Open Compute Project.
The fiercely adaptive SSD indicates the release of a better compatible hyperscale data center with critical latency requirements.
Brett Pemble, Seagate's general manager and vice president of SSD products said, "The new SSD will help improve on demands for fast access to information, where split seconds drive incremental value gains."
The product will support any Seagate system protocol that owns a Non-Volatile Memory Express "NVMe", which allows the permission of levels of parallelism through the PCIe bus that offers a great deal of collective performance.
The development of the protocol was manufactured by an association of industry dealt by Seagate that was arranged to find a superior transport solution to SATA.
Analyst Gregory Wong of Forward Insights stated, "Seagate has effectively rewritten the rules for performance with this latest SSD unit. Based on our latest analysis, Seagate is already the leading provider to the emerging PCIe OCP market."
The untitled unit of 10 gigabytes per second will house a 16-lane PCIe slot, following a slower unit of 8-lane slot. Although it will still run at 6.7 gigabytes per second, giving the two units an advance in a responsive SSD.