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ADATA (consumer website) ADATA Industrial Solutions; ADATA Lighting. Archived 2020-07-24 at the Wayback Machine (Traditional Chinese). ADATA Powertrain. Archived 2020-08-13 at the Wayback Machine (Traditional Chinese). XPG. Archived 2020-11-24 at the Wayback Machine (gaming).
For general computer use, the 2.5-inch form factor (typically found in laptops and used for most SATA SSDs) is the most popular, in three thicknesses [98] (7.0mm, 9.5mm, 14.8 or 15.0mm; with 12.0mm also available for some models). For desktop computers with 3.5-inch hard disk drive slots, a simple adapter plate can be used to make such a drive fit.
GS Nanotech [8] [9] Russia: No No Yes No No Hewlett-Packard: United States No No Yes No No Hikvision: China No No Yes No No HGST [10] (owned by Western Digital) United States and Japan Formerly, but now absorbed into its parent, Western Digital Formerly through Flash Forward, [5] a joint venture between Toshiba (now Kioxia) and its then-sister ...
Enterprise-class drives can have a height up to 15 mm. Seagate released a 7 mm drive aimed at entry level laptops and high end netbooks in December 2009. Western Digital released on April 23, 2013 a hard drive 5 mm in height specifically aimed at Ultrabooks .
Boeing Truss-Braced Wing, a proposed airplane design with high aspect ratio wings "That Bloody Woman", derogatory nickname for Margaret Thatcher; The Bridge World, American magazine about contract bridge
In any case, the vendor field, also commonly called a "raw value", may be displayed as a decimal or hexadecimal number; its meaning is entirely up to the drive manufacturer (but often corresponds to counts or a physical unit, such as degrees Celsius or seconds).
The Opal SSC (Security Subsystem Class) is an implementation profile for Storage Devices built to: Protect the confidentiality of stored user data against unauthorized access once it leaves the owner's control (involving a power cycle and subsequent deauthentication). Enable interoperability between multiple SD vendors. [1]
Write amplification was always present in SSDs before the term was defined, but it was in 2008 that both Intel [4] [9] and SiliconSystems started using the term in their papers and publications. [10] All SSDs have a write amplification value and it is based on both what is currently being written and what was previously written to the SSD.