Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 16 submissions in the queue.

Submission Preview

Link to Story

SD Cards Hop on the PCIe 4.0 Bus to Hit 4GB/s With Version 8.0 of Storage Spec

Accepted submission by upstart at 2020-05-20 11:11:47
News

████ # This file was generated bot-o-matically! Edit at your own risk. ████

put-your-whole-system-on-a-tiny-chip dept.

SD cards hop on the PCIe 4.0 bus to hit 4GB/s with version 8.0 of storage spec [theregister.co.uk]:

The SD Association, which oversees the design of SD cards, has emitted version 8.0 of its specification that promises to accelerate the mini-memory storage standard to a tick under 4GB/s.

As outlined in a whitepaper [sdcard.org] [PDF] this month, the new spec will let existing SD Express and microSD Express cards employ PCIe 4.0 and NVMe to deliver a top speed data transfer speed of 3940 MB/s.

While the new spec [sdcard.org] is backwards-compatible, the latest top speed will only come with a card reader capable of connecting to the extra row of pins present on SD Express cards that support dual PCIe lanes.

The SD Association isn’t a lone wolf so those readers will be ubiquitous.

The Association imagines its new spec will be used to capture 8K video in real-time, in Internet of Things devices and in automotive applications. However multi-PCIe-lane-capable cameras are not yet a thing and automakers like to keep their bills of materials a few years behind the bleeding edge. So it may be a while before very fast SD cards are an everyday luxury.

The good news is that SD Express and microSD Express cards can still get to 1970 MB/s on a device with a single PCIe 4.x lane under version 8 of the specification, and SD Express can get there with a pair of 3.x lanes. Which is rather faster than many SSDs and, as SD Express can climb to 128TB on a single card, a rather tasty storage option. ®

Sponsored: How to simplify data protection on Amazon Web Services [theregister.co.uk]


Original Submission