Besides improved performance, one of the other big advantages is that SD Express retains backward compatibility with current and legacy devices, and are part of the new SD 7.0 specification.
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According to the official press release, the new technology will allow the maximum storage capacity in SD memory cards to from 2TB with SDXC to a whopping 128 TB with the new SD Ultra Capacity (SDUC) card. Speeds will see a significant bump as well, with the PCIe interface delivering a 985 Megabytes per second (MB/s) maximum data transfer rate.
As we saw in the proof-of-concept demo at the event, a SanDisk-manufactured SDUC card seems to have hit 898Mb/s read speeds and 580Mb/s write speeds in CrystalDiskMark.
Next-gen SD Express read and write speeds are astounding (Image: Beebom)
SD Express uses PCIe 3.0 and NVMe v1.3 protocols defined by PCI-SIG and NVM Express, respectively, on the second row of pins used by UHS-II cards today. These cards also bring new options to system developers offered by PCIe and NVMe capabilities, such as Bus Mastering, Multi Queue (without locking mechanism) and Host Memory Buffer, according to the release.
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