Kioxia is continuing its effort to bring more affordable storage options to the mainstream market, this time with the introduction of its BG8 series that aims to deliver PCI Express 5.0 speeds to a ...
If you want to build the fastest PC you can around AMD’s new Ryzen 7000 processor, you’re going to have to wait until November. New SSDs built using the PCI Express 5.0 interface will debut then, AMD ...
KIOXIA is looking to ease the burden on consumers and PC OEMs with new affordable and mainstream SSD options, including the ...
PCI Express 5.0 has dethroned many worthy contenders in hardware technology to become the most redundant modern feature in early 2026. It's got all the classic marketing sells, like the promise of ...
The latest version of PCI Express brings massive bandwidth increases to PCs, enabling truly blistering SSD read and write speeds up to 14,000MBps. Here's what you need to know to get your PC storage ...
With the arrival of PCIe Gen 5 SSDs, we've seen a massive boost in read speeds compared to where PCIe Gen tech was only a couple of years ago. As the first PCIe Gen 5 SSDs hit the market with ratings ...
The age of PCIe 4.0 is over: long live PCIe 5.0! The new generation of SSDs are hitting the market, and wowing us with their incredible sequential read and write speeds. The performance jump from PCIe ...
PCIe (Peripheral Component Interconnect Express) is a high-bandwidth expansion bus that allows people to connect things like solid-state drives and graphics cards. Each new generation brings changes ...
You don't need to match PCIe generations for storage ...
In the high-end PC market, it’s vitally important that the numbers always continue to go up. That means faster performance, newer specs, and (on occasion) new model numbers for existing components.
With both Intel and AMD offering PCIe 5 support on their latest motherboards, SSD manufacturers are keen to offer models that peak at up to 14,000MB/sec. Better known for making motherboards and ...
It’s still not a good time to buy a PCIe 5.0 SSD. With faster options, less monstrous heatsinks, and lower prices all expected to hit the market eventually, it’s wise to wait if you can.