Tuesday, December 20th 2022

ADATA to Showcase 8 TB PCIe 5.0 SSD, External USB4 SSD and More at CES 2023

ADATA, the world's leading memory module brand and XPG, their performance and gaming arm, today announced that they will be attending the CES 2023, where they will showcase a number of new products with the theme "Make it Fusion, Make it Xtreme!" The feature product to be displayed will be the XPG FUSION 1600 W Titanium power supply developed in collaboration with Delta Electronics. Other impressive power supplies also equipped with the latest ATX 3.0 and PCIe 5.0, such as the XPG CYBERCORE II and CORE REACTOR II series will be shown as well.

ADATA will also present impressive offerings in other categories, such as the XPG PCIe Gen5 SSD which offers a patented heat dissipation design, up to 8 TB of storage space, and read/write speed of up to 14,000 MB/s. Additionally, ADATA will present other award-winning memory and storage products, as well as gaming focused products in system, chassis, special themed pc build and peripherals categories.
ADATA will also feature solutions for system vendors and other commercial enterprises. Tech enthusiasts should definitely keep an eye out for the CXL (Compute Express Link) memory modules. ADATA will lead the industry in delivering this revolutionary new product to market which will definitely make a visit to the ADATA/XPG booth this year worth your time.

CES 2023 Innovation Award-Winning
Known around the world for their top-quality DRAM and SSD products, ADATA will of course have impressive new products in these categories on display at CES this year. The ADATA SE920 has already won several awards and boasts the title of 'Fastest External SSD in the World.' With USB4 architecture, a transfer rate of up to 3800 MB/s, and a patented heat dissipation design, it's no wonder that this product won the CES 2023 Innovation Award, Taiwan Excellence Award, and Germany's Red Dot Award.

Equally impressive, the new XPG CASTER DDR5 DRAM will also have a presence at CES. This memory module has a data transfer rate of up to 8,000 MT/s. Not only is this series compatible with both the latest Intel and AMD motherboards, but it also supports Intel XMP 3.0, for easy overclocking. With ADATA's award-winning components, your games and applications will run faster and smoother than ever before.

Prioritize Form & Function
While ADATA is second to none in performance, the brand also strives to create products that are visually appealing as well. At CES 2023, a number of aesthetically minded, high-performance products will be available for your viewing pleasure. One of the most noteworthy examples will be the ADATA ACE 6400 DDR5 memory module. The combination of top-tier performance and elegant design are impressive enough for this product to have been recognized as a Japan Good Design Award winner. A product like this would look great paired with a set of XPG's white components and peripherals, a number of which will also be on display at the show this year.

CXL Memory Will Revolutionize Enterprise Solutions
ADATA will lead the market in launching CXL (Compute Express Link) memory modules with system capacities of up to 16 TB. These heavy duty units will allow companies and projects of all sizes and types to rapidly improve the capabilities of their systems by expanding their memory resources at an exponential rate. This powerful new product is an excellent choice for intensive computing projects such as AI development, edge computing, cloud servers, and other high-speed transmission enterprises.

Game in Style with XPG
XPG will take their aesthetic offerings to the next level in 2023 with several visually stunning hardware upgrades. The XPG BATTLECRUISER II E-ATX chassis takes the highly acclaimed first generation case with its iconic four tempered glass panels and adds built-in ARGB lighting effects. At CES, you'll be able to see this impressive upgrade with custom lighting effects made possible with XPG's free ecosystem management software, XPG PRIME.

XPG's brand ambassador, Mera, continues to expand her own presence in the XPG product catalogue. This year, XPG introduces MERA EDITION GEAR. This special line of products includes component models from multiple categories either featuring Mera's face or inspired by her iconic style. The XPG LANCER RGB DDDR5 7200 DRAM Mera Edition, for example, sports Mera's face directly on the unit's heatsink. There will also be a Mera themed chassis, headset, keyboard, mouse, and mousepad. With XPG, players can build systems that perform well and show off their style.

ADATA/XPG invites all attendees to visit their booth at CES 2023. For those unable to attend the event in person, they have also prepared a detailed online exhibition site and a video showcase of the highlight products being shown at the event this year.
Source: ADATA
Add your own comment

17 Comments on ADATA to Showcase 8 TB PCIe 5.0 SSD, External USB4 SSD and More at CES 2023

#1
Chomiq

Wow, hands off the merchandise.
Posted on Reply
#2
igralec84
Chomiq
Wow, hands off the merchandise.
I'm deeply offended by this groping and will skip Adata when i consider buying an 8TB PCIE 5 SSD :laugh:

Speaking of PCIE 5.5 SSDs, where are they hiding, can't wait for 400€ 1TB variants with 20mm fans on them :D
Posted on Reply
#3
Easo
Personally I am more interested in 2-4 TB PCIe SSD's. The price will probably be insane.
Posted on Reply
#4
maxfly
I somehow missed the 8tb announcement buried within all the other greatest in the world bravado.
Posted on Reply
#5
AnarchoPrimitiv
Forget the sequential speeds, I want to see whether the new generation of PCIe 5.0 SSDs have markedly improved low queue depth random r/w speeds. I honestly think though that in terms of normal user experience with respect to responsiveness, we're not going to notice much of a difference between NVMe SSDs whether they're PCIe 3.0, 4 0, or 5.0....heck, I bet most people couldn't tell the difference between a SATAIII SSD and a PCIe 3.0 SSD, and whether they could tell the difference between a SATAIII SSD and a PCIe 5.0 SSD is something I'll remain very skeptical of until I see some real, empirical data to prove otherwise.

I think that 5.0 ssds won't really offer any benefit to a normal user and are mainly for enterprise (obviously) and perhaps content creators dealing with huge video files....and of course, the most lucrative demographic in the PC market, individuals with weak egos...haha
Posted on Reply
#6
Athlonite
Game in Uncertainty with XPG

There fixed that for you Adata

After their 8200 pro cock ups I think I'll stay well away from adata and their skullduggery pratices
Posted on Reply
#7
Wirko
AnarchoPrimitivForget the sequential speeds, I want to see whether the new generation of PCIe 5.0 SSDs have markedly improved low queue depth random r/w speeds.
I'll tell you the answer right away: no.
Posted on Reply
#8
bonehead123
AthloniteGame in Uncertainty with XPG

There fixed that for you Adata

After their 8200 pro cock ups I think I'll stay well away from adata and their skullduggery pratices
^^THIS^^

Once that nonsense came to light, I instantly & permanently removed ADATA from all of my pc parts lists....along with all the other yahoo's that did the same kind of sh*t in the last few years......

I have absolutely ZERO tolerance for any bait & switch crap, false advertising, and/or deceptive, spiked-up, cherry-picked test bench numbers that don't translate into real world performance measurements :(
Posted on Reply
#9
ARF
bonehead123^^THIS^^

Once that nonsense came to light, I instantly & permanently removed ADATA from all of my pc parts lists....along with all the other yahoo's that did the same kind of sh*t in the last few years......

I have absolutely ZERO tolerance for any bait & switch crap, false advertising, and/or deceptive, spiked-up, cherry-picked test bench numbers that don't translate into real world performance measurements :(
lol, what kind of nonsense is this? :D
FYI, ADATA and XPG are one of the best, and for this reason I have as my primary SSD the super fast XPG GAMMIX S11 Pro. Much better than Samsung's overpriced and dirty schemes garbage company.

Also, if your logic was followed, nvidia should have bankrupted a decade or so ago.

Posted on Reply
#12
Gmr_Chick
ChomiqShould have called it Manga Gaming
Oh I know! That would be so kawaii!! /s

Maybe as a mid 30's something I'm simply "too old" for this shit anymore but I'm getting really fucking sick of all this anime waifu bug-eyed crap that's made its way into PC hardware in recent times. Gundam and Evangelion hardware is one thing (even though the EVA stuff is fucking ugly and a lot of the Gundam stuff was meh in terms of aesthetics) but no ASUS, I don't want/need a stupid "Demon Slayer" GPU or motherboard or a case for that matter.

Just stop with this shit, please.
Posted on Reply
#13
samum
What will 8TB of PCIe 5 NVMe cost?





Posted on Reply
#14
Minus Infinity
Adata, so will ship 8TB initially and a quiet revision will cut that to 6TB or swap out TLC for QLC on the sly.
Posted on Reply
#16
Prima.Vera
It's not just about the size, it's about the cost. The SSD prices have been stagnant for a couple of years now.
Wished that SSD would have a price graph compared to the HDDs over the years, however this is not the case sadly...
Posted on Reply
#17
Xii-Nyth
Gmr_ChickOh I know! That would be so kawaii!! /s

Maybe as a mid 30's something I'm simply "too old" for this shit anymore but I'm getting really fucking sick of all this anime waifu bug-eyed crap that's made its way into PC hardware in recent times. Gundam and Evangelion hardware is one thing (even though the EVA stuff is fucking ugly and a lot of the Gundam stuff was meh in terms of aesthetics) but no ASUS, I don't want/need a stupid "Demon Slayer" GPU or motherboard or a case for that matter.

Just stop with this shit, please.
Unfortunately parents money kids trying to like "y2k" stuff + large pc market in some highly densely populated places where the more questionable anime is the default tv show to watch
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Nov 20th, 2024 05:42 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts