Super Talent Introduces Industrial Temperature SSDs
"Super Talent Technology today announced a new line of Solid State Drives (SSDs) that are rated to operate over a -40C to 85C industrial temperature (I-Temp) range"
Published: 27th November 2007 | Source: Super Talent |
Super Talent Technology, a leading manufacturer of flash storage solutions and DRAM memory modules, today announced a new line of Solid State Drives (SSDs) that are rated to operate over a -40C to 85C industrial temperature (I-Temp) range.
Super Talent SSDs are interchangeable with conventional hard drives but are significantly more resistant to shock and vibration. Moreover, these new I-Temp SSDs have considerably better tolerance of extreme temperatures than hard drives. Super Talent’s range of nineteen new I-Temp SSDs spans industry standard 1.8-inch, 2.5-inch and 3.5-inch form factor SATA SSDs, and 1.8-inch and 2.5-inch IDE (PATA) SSDs.
These SSDs are designed and manufactured in Super Talent’s San Jose, California headquarters, and are backed with a three year warranty. Super Talent sells its SSDs directly to OEM customers worldwide. OEM pricing on SS28A5C25I, 128GB 2.5-inch I-temp SATA SSD, is under $4000.
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Really? Why would he want to review an ECS board? lawlll
I don't really think "want" would be the correct word to describe Kemps feelings for this review ;)
But hey, we can't just cover the cool expensive stuff :p
But hey, we can't just cover the cool expensive stuff :p
They make stuff thats not cool and expensive? W...why? Why would they do this? :p
They make stuff thats not cool and expensive? W...why? Why would they do this? :p
My thoughts exactly....I cant see a market in it tbh :p
But i dont see the point in reviewing cheap POS thats thrown in a combo for free thats on the edge of barely working.
To hopefully prevent people from making the same mistake as you ;)
I had an ECS C19 A-SLI in my first build. It was pretty damn good tbh way better than the 3 previous Asus boards that come before it.
-SLAP- Go to your room! :eek:
Since it has SLI in the name id be willing to bet it had a pretty decent chipset so thats why it was probably a decent board. I have a Geforce6100 chipset and it has integrated video. Says it supports DDR2 800 dual channel (which it does) but it dosent support enough volts to run that speed.I had an ECS C19 A-SLI in my first build. It was pretty damn good tbh way better than the 3 previous Asus boards that come before it.



Really? Why would he want to review an ECS board? lawlll