Allegro 7-Port USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type A PCIe Card Adds Six External and One Internal USB-A Ports to Computers With an Available PCIe Card Slot Sonnet Technologies today announced the launch of the ...
The new Allegra features eight external USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps) Type-C ports and fits neatly inside a single-width card space. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate ...
With the next evolution of USB now here with the launch of USB 3.1, vendors are quickly ramping up production of storage solutions among others to utilize the increase in performance. With this comes ...
Back the late 2000s, when netbooks were the latest craze, some models would come with an inbuilt 3G modem for Internet access. At the time, proper mobile Internet was a hip cool thing too — miles ...
Sonnet on Wednesday rolled out two adapter cards, the Allegro USB-C 4-Port PCIe and the Allegro Pro USB 3.1 PCIe, both of which can add powered USB ports to any computer with a PCIe slot, or even ...
When you're piecing together a new PC build or planning an upgrade, every port choice feels significant. You weigh the pros and cons, staring at the back of your motherboard's I/O shield and the empty ...
QNAP today announced the launch of its new USB 3.2 Gen 2 Dual-port PCIe Expansion Card, product code QXP-10G2U3A. This innovative expansion card is designed to enhance the connectivity and performance ...
A low-profile PCI Express Gen 2 card, the U3-PCIE2-2PO1host adapter from Point Grey Research offers two SuperSpeed USB ports and aninternal power connector to ensure reliable power delivery to the ...
Sonnet's Allegro Pro is a solid PCI Express expansion card for those serious about their connectivity. For the general consumer, this card is still great, but you may want to wait for online sales to ...
The new Sonnet McFiver brings internal SSD storage, 10 Gigabit Ethernet, 10Gbps USB-C, and two SSD slots for high-speed storage in a single PCIe card for the Mac Pro or any Mac with an PCI-E enclosure ...
I'm looking to put 8 USB3.0 cameras each running at ~3 gbit (on a USB3 5GBit connection) into one PC. I thought I could pick up 1 or 2 4 port USB3 expansion cards and pair with the built in Intel ...