The Intel® 31244 PCI-X to Serial ATA Controller is a fully integrated state-of-the-art SATA host controller that enables storage equipment manufacturers to deliver SATA-based storage solutions now.
Looking to add Serial ATA support to your older Power Mac, like Apple’s Power Mac G5? Upgrade maker Sonnet Technologies Inc. on Thursday announced its Tempo Serial ATA PCI host adapter. Serial ATA ...
The SiI 3132 PCI-Express to Serial ATA II host controller is targeted at hard disk, CD, and tape drive interfaces in PC/server motherboards. The IC offers full SATA II functionality, including Native ...
FirmTek on Tuesday announced its SeriTek/1SE2 Serial ATA PCI card, which features two ports for connecting external Serial ATA devices to your Mac. It offers 150MB per second transfer rates per port ...
New VIA VT6421 PCI Serial ATA RAID Controller integrates CardBus support for mobile and compact PCs and Combo support for greater peripheral connectivity Taipei, Taiwan, 13 January 2004 – VIA ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Adaptec launched a 4-port Serial ATA RAID controller for ...
San Jose, Calif., November 21, 2002-LDIC the leader in Super Integration and Mixed Signal Technology has announce its first generation “Free IP†for Serial ATA Physical Layer, Transport and Link ...
One of my wish list for the new MacBook Pro is a eSATA port. While I can keep wishing, some of you in UK who cant wait for it to come true will be able to add eSATA port to your MacBook Pro. Sonnet, a ...
Hi. This is my first post so thanks to the people who bother to run this forum.<BR>Issue:<BR>I have a K7N2 DELTA-L Motherboard from MSI. It does not have serial ata port(s) on it. Therefore since i ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. What is Serial ATA The first ATA hard drives appeared on ...
An industry initiative for Serial ATA II was announced this week, so it's natural to wonder where Serial ATA 1.0 is, now that it's been some six months since the new drive specification was finalized.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results