Thursday, August 6th 2015

Lite-On Debuts New NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

Lite-On, a global leader in the design, development and manufacturing of enterprise and client Solid-State Drives, announces its next generation EP series, the EP2 M.2 with NVMe protocol, at Flash Memory Summit 2015 in Santa Clara, California. As the demand for data storage, server virtualization, virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), and cloud computing applications increases, companies are looking for ways to consolidate as well as integrate storage solutions that address the need for rigorous workloads.

Lite-On's NVMe M.2 PCIe SSDs are capable of combating various storage issues in the datacenter environment. The EP2 series enables systems to process large amounts of data-intensive applications. By combining the NVMe protocol with Lite-On's customized firmware, commands are bypassed and subsequently, result in improvement for multiple queues and higher queue depths. The CPU is also used to its full potential, so that the IOPS will not be bottlenecked by single core limitations.

The EP2 series delivers superior speed with random read and write performance of up to 250K IOPS/25K IOPS. With ultra-low latencies of 35/35 (μs), the EP2 ensures the fastest and most consistent command response times in the industry. The EP2 also features power loss protection (PLP), scalability, end-to-end data protection, low power consumption, high endurance, sustained performance, and customized firmware, which supports mixed-use environments and application workloads such as online transaction processing (OLTP), financial transactions, E-commerce, SQL logging, collaboration and email servers.

"Lite-On storage takes pride in quality, innovation, and performance for all of our storage products. I'm happy to announce our next generation EP series SSD. The EP series utilizes the latest NVMe protocol, which is combined with our proprietary firmware. This removes the bottleneck on SATA hardware and creates at least 1.4x throughput improvements for all workloads. We are committed in continuing to bring innovative products to meet today's storage demands and stay competitive in the growing market," said Darlo Perez, Managing Director of Lite-On Americas region.

Lite-On will also be showcasing its new ER1 and EM1 SATA SSDs. Designed to address the capacity and performance needs of hyperscale computing, virtualized data centers, and rigorous I/O server operations, both the ER1 and EM1 doubles the maximum capacity of its read intensive drive of up to 4TB --one of the largest capacity of SATA solutions in the marketplace-- in two compact form factor sizes, 1.8" and 2.5."
Add your own comment

8 Comments on Lite-On Debuts New NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

#1
Octopuss
I thought last time Liteon had any products was back in the age of CD-ROM drives. Surely doesn't look like global leader of anything.
Posted on Reply
#2
IamEzio
They are still strong in the OEM market , have a hand in SSD's , optical drives and some more.
Posted on Reply
#3
peche
Thermaltake fanboy
nice photo ... :wtf:
Posted on Reply
#4
RealNeil
I quit buying that brand after they had problems with their eject tray function and wouldn't fix it. Four DVD drives crapped out on me and it's been years since I have bought their brand.
Posted on Reply
#5
P4-630
OctopussI thought last time Liteon had any products was back in the age of CD-ROM drives. Surely doesn't look like global leader of anything.
I have an Asus G750 ROG laptop and they are shipped with Lite-On(plextor) SSD's
Posted on Reply
#6
bonehead123
In all my 20+ years of computing, I have yet to have any device or product from them that would work reliably, consistently and without problems......no thanks :D
Posted on Reply
#7
Fx
They used to be my exclusive choice for CD/DVD drives until I eventually tried out Samsung which also turned out to be equally reliable.
Posted on Reply
#8
bonehead123
Well fwiw....I have 3 optical drives, 8 hdds, 48gb of ram, 3 lcd tvs, a monitor, a fridge, and a washer & dryer set all made by samsung. All have been running flawlessly for many many many years....

Just saying
Posted on Reply
Apr 25th, 2024 09:50 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts