What's the exact set-up you're planning? Is it like one of the following?<BR><BR>Motherboard -> CardBus slot -> ESATA CardBus Adapter -> Port Multiplier -> Hard Drives<BR>-or-<BR>Motherboard -> SATA ...
Unfortunately, hard drives, like nature, abhor a vacuum. They fill up with music, recorded televisions, videos, pictures from your Aunt Gloria’s wedding, anything and almost everything from the ...
SAN JOSE, CA (December 23, 2013) -- Addonics Technologies (www.addonics.com) today announced two new members of its Port Multiplier family, both designed to support SATA 3.0 6Gbps and greatly enhance ...
Lets You Connect Up To Five SATA Drives To Any SATA Port SAN JOSE, CA (September 14, 2009) -- Addonics Technologies (www.addonics.com) today announced a feature-rich hardware port multiplier, the ...
I was thinking of adding this enclosure to my Linux NAS box at some point in the future. The product comes with a PCI eSATA RAID card that support the two 4x port multiplier backplane in the enclosure ...
The XRS10L140 and XRS10L240 are five- and six-port SATA port multiplier ICs, with the '240 also featuring port selector functionality. Both devices run at 1.5 and 3.0 Gbits/s, and have an analog front ...
Addonics has come out with an innovative and compact size 4x1 Port Multiplier with integrated hardware Raid controller that's OS independent. It comes in the form of System version (PCI-form factor) – ...
Fremont, Calif.—Exar Corp. entered the storage market with a pair of SATA/SAS port multipliers. The XRS10L140 and XRS10L240 are the first in a series of storage devices called Xstor that are designed ...
If you are the sort of computer enthusiast that has their machine crammed with hard drives and still wants more storage space for your digital files and backups, Addonics has a new product for you.
Addonics on Tuesday introduced its 5×1 eSATA Hardware Port Multiplier (HPM). The device enables up to five drives to be connected to any computer regardless of operating system using a single external ...
It probably goes without saying that hardware hackers were excited when the Raspberry Pi 4 was announced, but it wasn’t just because there was a new entry into everyone’s favorite line of Linux SBCs.