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  2. Small Form-factor Pluggable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Form-factor_Pluggable

    The QSFP14 standard is designed to carry FDR InfiniBand, SAS-3 [54] or 16G Fibre Channel. 100 Gbit/s (QSFP28) The QSFP28 standard [7] is designed to carry 100 Gigabit Ethernet, EDR InfiniBand, or 32G Fibre Channel. Sometimes this transceiver type is also referred to as QSFP100 or 100G QSFP [55] for sake of simplicity. 200 Gbit/s (QSFP56)

  3. Cisco Nexus switches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cisco_Nexus_switches

    The 1000v is a virtual switch for use in virtual environments including both VMware vSphere and Microsoft Hyper-V [2] It is as such not a physical box but a software application that interacts with the hypervisor so you can virtualize the networking environment and be able to configure your system as if all virtual servers have connections to a physical switch and include the capabilities that ...

  4. Serial Attached SCSI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_attached_SCSI

    SAS allows a higher transfer speed (SAS-1, SAS-2, SAS-3, and SAS-4 supports data bandwidth of 3, 6, 12, and 24 Gbits/sec, respectively) [10] than most parallel SCSI standards. SAS achieves these speeds on each initiator-target connection, hence getting higher throughput, whereas parallel SCSI shares the speed across the entire multidrop bus.

  5. NEC SX-Aurora TSUBASA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NEC_SX-Aurora_TSUBASA

    NEC SX-Aurora TSUBASA A300-8 server with eight vector engines on display at the NEC booth at SC'17 in Denver. The NEC SX-Aurora TSUBASA is a vector processor of the NEC SX architecture family. [1] [2] Unlike previous SX supercomputers, the SX-Aurora TSUBASA is provided as a PCIe card, termed by NEC as a "Vector Engine" (VE). [2]

  6. SAS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sas

    SAS Group, Swedish airline holding company . Scandinavian Airlines, stylized as SAS; SAS Institute, American developer of analytics and AI software; SAS (shoemakers), American shoe manufacturer

  7. Datasheet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datasheet

    Front page of a floppy disk controller data sheet (1979) A datasheet, data sheet, or spec sheet is a document that summarizes the performance and other characteristics of a product, machine, component (e.g., an electronic component), material, subsystem (e.g., a power supply), or software in sufficient detail that allows a buyer to understand what the product is and a design engineer to ...

  8. Fast Ethernet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast_Ethernet

    100BASE-SX is a version of Fast Ethernet over optical fiber standardized in TIA/EIA-785-1-2002. It is a lower-cost, shorter-distance alternative to 100BASE-FX. Because of the shorter wavelength used (850 nm) and the shorter distance supported, 100BASE-SX uses less expensive optical components (LEDs instead of lasers).

  9. Synthetic-aperture sonar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic-aperture_sonar

    Synthetic-aperture sonar (SAS) is a form of sonar in which sophisticated post-processing of sonar data is used in ways closely analogous to synthetic-aperture radar. Synthetic-aperture sonars combine a number of acoustic pings to form an image with much higher along-track resolution than conventional sonars.