Milton Keynes, UK - August 17, 2010 - GIGABYTE TECHNOLOGY Co., Ltd, a leading manufacturer of motherboards, graphics cards and other computing hardware solutions today announced support for USB ...
On Asus's new motherboards -- the P8Z77-V and some of its contemporary cousins -- there's an intriguing new feature: USB attached SCSI protocol, or UASP for short. Asus says that UASP can almost ...
And UASP would be USB Attached SCSI ProtocolThis is a new feature promises to deliver higher transfer speeds to supporting devices. GIGABYTE TECHNOLOGY Co., Ltd, a leading manufacturer of motherboards ...
Page 2: Thirteen Years of Change -- Same Protocol For Transfer Page 3: Test Setup, CrystalDiskMark Page 4: PCMark 7 Page 5: Real-World File Copy Performance Page 6: Conclusion When Asus asked us if we ...
ASUS announced USB 3.0 Boost, it adds UAS Protocol support to enable up to 170 percent faster data transfers. ASUS USB 3.0 Boost adds new UAS Protocol support for improved data transfer speeds and ...
TOKYO, Japan, August 30, 2011 — Renesas Electronics Corporation (TSE: 6723), a premier provider of advanced semiconductor solutions, today announced the availability of its new SuperSpeed Universal ...
single-bay enclosures featuring eSATA, FireWire 800, and USB 3.0 capable of fast USB Attached SCSI Protocol (UASP) City of Industry, CA - October 4, 2012 - Sans Digital, a leading provider of high ...
Old technologies like VNC and USB get a new twist with Intel's vPro and USB's USB Attached SCSI Protocol. VNC can access the BIOS of motherboards with Intel Core vPro processors like ITOX’s SB330-CRM ...
This file type includes high resolution graphics and schematics when applicable. USB 3.0 offers approximately 10:1 performance improvement over USB 2.0, but realizing the full potential of that gain ...
Renesas Electronics has unveiled its new Superspeed USB 3.0 SATA3 bridge SoC, which it claims is the world's first to support the USB Attached SCSI Protocol (UASP) that 'significantly' speeds up data ...
When USB debuted in 1999, it offered maximum throughput of 12Mb/s. Today, USB 3.0 offers 4.8Gb/s. That's not surprising. What is surprising is that modern USB 3 controllers use the same Bulk-Only ...