Thunderbolt has only recently reached the mainstream, made little models of laptops or computers have included this technology in 2011, but it is certainly the next step in relaying information. Thunderbolt technology gives us a jump as surprising as it was the USB at the time and is emerging as the next standard in the computer industry.
This is something that Intel is very clear and it is working to squeeze the most potential of this technology. As reported by the famous maker of chipsets Thunderbolt could achieve a transfer rate of 50 Gbps in a range of 100 meters in the next 4 years and has asserted Jeff Demain a technology convention in New York.
To achieve such performance the company intends to continue to use Intel silicon for the manufacture of the component, but adds optical technology to improve performance. This will integrate the Thunderbolt to different types of gadgets, be they computers, laptops or smartphones. Now only remains for us to wait as development proceeds in Thunderbolt but it appears that is on track.
This is something that Intel is very clear and it is working to squeeze the most potential of this technology. As reported by the famous maker of chipsets Thunderbolt could achieve a transfer rate of 50 Gbps in a range of 100 meters in the next 4 years and has asserted Jeff Demain a technology convention in New York.
To achieve such performance the company intends to continue to use Intel silicon for the manufacture of the component, but adds optical technology to improve performance. This will integrate the Thunderbolt to different types of gadgets, be they computers, laptops or smartphones. Now only remains for us to wait as development proceeds in Thunderbolt but it appears that is on track.
- Intel Teases Its After-Thunderbolt Connector, With Laser Power (29/04/2011)
- Intel prepping 50Gbps Thunderbolt sequel for 2015 (28/04/2011)
- Intel Eyes Post-Thunderbolt Interconnect for 2015 (28/04/2011)
- Intel eyes post-Thunderbolt interconnect technology (28/04/2011)
- Intel touts progress toward 50Gbps optical link (29/04/2011)
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