News

The new PCIe External Cable 3.0 class cables are becoming the new standard for external cables for storage and enterprise systems. This cable type is defined in the PCI Express External Cabling ...
PCI Express External Cabling Specification Completed by PCI-SIG Enables New Usage Models Such as Platform Disaggregated I/O, Chassis-Chassis Expansion I/O and Others BEAVERTON, Ore. - February 7 ...
I bought a simpler m.2-to-pcie riser/adapter before; it just had a ribbon cable a few inches long. I didn’t end up using it, because the nuc I was going to use decided it didn’t want to cooperate.
PCIe cabling becomes CopprLink, with PCI-SIG talking specifications with PCIe 5.0 and PCIe 6.0 technology handling 32GT/s and 64GT/s, respectively.
A new PCI Express standard has been approved that will allow for the development of and operation of external PCIe graphics cards. Dubbed the PCI Express External Cabling specification and ...
The organization responsible for the PCIE Express standard has released a new specification for high-speed internal and external cables. The PCI-SIG says the new CopprLink Cable specification ...
The PCI Express External Cabling 1.0 specification, published by the PCI Special Interest Group, will allow developers to create external applications, as well as applications ...
The new cabling standard includes unique specifications for both internal and external cables that can reliably carry PCIe 5.0 and PCIe 6.0 connections at up to 64 GT/s.
The PCI Special Interest Group (PCI-SIG) in 2007 released an external cabling specification enabling interconnection of PCIe systems at 2.5Gbps (Gen1) and 5Gbps (Gen2), facilitating PCIe extension ...
Their newly introduced CopprLink specifications cover both internal and external copper cabling, capable of accommodating the 32GT/s and 64GT/s speeds associated with PCIe 5.0 and 6.0.
PCIe cables will be faster, cheaper, and thinner than Thunderbolt, but less functional, since the latter can be daisy-chained and carry DisplayPort data while external PCI Express cannot.
Nowadays, it is widely used for magnetic hard drives and SSDs in 2.5-inch format as well as for the M.2 slot. In the case of SSDs, it is becoming less and less popular and is being replaced by PCI ...