Reactive Group Solid State Disks Ltd SCSIFLASH Arraid, LLC SCSI SDD

Innodisk’s New Anti-Sulfuration Modules Ensures Reliability and Robustness in High-Sulfur Environments

Taipei 2017/09/26 – Innodisk, the leading provider of industrial and embedded memory modules, is launching its new anti-sulfuration DRAM modules. Many industries struggle with excessive down time due to high sulfur content that causes irreparable damage to electronic equipment. The silver used in traditional DRAM modules will start corroding in contact with sulfur and lose conductivity, eventually leading to full module failure.

This notice is to make our customers aware that the previous web address for Solid State Disks Ltd (SSDL) www.ssd.gb.com is no longer active.

As of 1st September 2017 Solid State Disks Ltd will be found at www.solidstatedisks.co.uk

Many thanks for your attention on this update.

Taipei 2017/08/28 – Innodisk, the leading provider of industrial and embedded storage and memory solutions, are launching the industry-first embedded DDR4 2666MT/s DRAM series. Available in a variety of form factors, the DDR4 2666-series boasts significantly higher speeds compared to earlier modules, making it the perfect fit for automation, surveillance and network applications.

SSDL to exhibit at the 2017 FSEMC Conference and Exhibition between September 18-21 in Memphis, Tennessee.

The FSEMC provides cost effective solutions to simulator operational and maintenance problems through the widely respected international Flight Simulator Engineering and Maintenance Conference and establishes technical standards that increase simulator readiness and reduce operational costs.

Attended by more than 300 flight simulator experts from around the world, the annual conference identifies technical solutions to engineering and maintenance issues resulting in immediate and long-term savings and increased efficiency for simulator users.

Picture this scenario: During the nighttime, there has been a break-in at a company location and the perpetrator has been caught on tape. The recording is stored and reviewed at a later time, only to find that -- due to compression -- the images of the perpetrator is obscured; also, frames have been dropped because of unstable data recording. This makes identification much harder and the recording might even be inadmissible in court.