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Pemalite said:
Lafiel said:

then I'm sure you won't have trouble to link a consumer product with these theoretical specifications (available at the time Cerny made his statement)

bonus points if you also provide a review that shows the practically available bandwidth

I sure can.  Here is one such device.


Here is another from Dell using nvme drives on a card.


And they have been around for years.
Here is a review Anandtech did with a drive that did 10GB/s back in 2016 that will beat the PS5 in 2020.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/10125/seagate-announces-pcie-x16-ssd-capable-of-10gbs


And here is another such drive.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/13051/gigabyte-launches-cmt4030-pcie-riser-cards-for-m2-ssds

Is that enough evidence? Or would you like some more?

You also have iSCSI over 100G ethernet SSD's which allows for 13GB/s transfers too.
http://sniansfblog.org/fibre-channel-vs-iscsi-the-great-debate-generates-questions-galore/

well, I did ask for consumer products  -  these are enterprise products (wouldn't you agree?) and technically speaking they are RAID on a card devices with several SSDs mounted into M.2 slots on the card

I'm not sure why you even bring iSCSI or fibre channel anywhere close to this debate btw

Last edited by Lafiel - on 25 October 2019