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PLX With New NAS SoC Family ($11 to $15 in Volume)

For the CE market

PLX Technology, Inc., supplier of consumer storage silicon and software, announced its NAS 7800 system-on-a-chip (SoC) family, the industry’s highest-performance, next generation of consumer-friendly network attached storage (NAS) solutions.

The new PLX NAS 7800 family tackles two separate challenges in today’s market. First, two of the SoCs – the NAS 7820 and NAS 7821 – bring to market the highest-performance solutions at the absolute lowest cost, making NAS more attractive in the home as a central, powerful storage platform. Second, the top-end NAS 7825 version enables higher levels of integration and functionality, thus supporting new markets for NAS, including routers/gateways, DVRs, and set-top boxes, each of which take advantage of PLX’s unique hardware and software platform.

The NAS 7800 family is PLX’s third generation of consumer NAS SoC solutions. PLX successfully doubled overall performance of the previous generation by implementing its highly optimized Trident architecture, which combines a dual-core ARM 11 multiprocessor with multiple NAS application specific-hardware engines and software acceleration modules. The Trident architecture provides exceptional multi-client NAS performance, while simultaneously running multiple software applications. Some of the optimized acceleration functions include encryption, hashing, RAID, audio, VoIP, and routing.

The NAS 7800 family’s unmatched price-performance ratio is driven by its high level of integration, requiring very few additional components to build a system. No external memory is required on the board as the device can boot from the disk drive. The NAS 7800 system runs on highly optimized Linux-based software to maximize NAS transfers and leave a large percentage of the system resources for applications.

The PLX NAS 7800 family can centralize storage and manage the high-speed streaming of multiple digital mediums, such as high-definition video, high-resolution photos, audio and other digital content, thus simultaneously connecting multiple users and electronic devices within and beyond the home. Additionally, PLX developed new applications that integrate NAS into set-top boxes, DVRs, routers/gateways and other networked consumer electronics including the connectivity of multiple computers (desktops, laptops and netbooks), smart phones, digital photo frames, Internet radio and other various mediums.

Based on market research, PLX expects global consumer NAS unit sales to grow dramatically, from 2.5 million today to nearly 13 million units by 2012, with the total available market for silicon to exceed $100M. PLX NAS growth is driven by consumer demand for immediate and constant access to secure digital content from any device, at anytime and anywhere on the planet.  

The flagship member of this new family, the NAS 7825, integrates dual ARM 11 processors, as well as a network co-processor, and is loaded with IO including dual RGMII, dual SATA, dual USB 2.0, and dual PCI Express 1.0 ports. The NAS 7825 solution is designed to support an expanded range of new NAS-related designs and market opportunities, including routers/gateways, DVRs, and set-top boxes. The dual RGMII ports are required in router applications, dual SATA ports to support multiple drives, and the dual PCI Express ports to allow the addition of other peripherals or functions such as Wi-Fi.

The NAS 7820 and NAS 7821 each incorporate the dual processors plus all the hardware and software acceleration modules of the Trident architecture, but with less IOs, which enables designers to match the functionality and price sensitivity of standard home consumer NAS applications.

PLX’s NAS 7800 family spearheads a new level of connectivity between consumer electronic devices,” said Tom Coughlin, of Coughlin Associates and founder and chairman of the Storage Visions conferences. “The unified home storage architecture of tomorrow depends upon the use of products like this to enable sharing and organizing content, while maintaining security and privacy for consumers.”

PLX recognizes that high performance remains the key aspect in this market and at the absolute lowest cost. PLX has taken great steps to bring to market the most optimized application-specific solution.In addition to the dual processors and network co-processor, the PLX NAS 7800 family has an optimized internal bus structure allowing numerous simultaneous transfers, bursts at 70Gb/s, and includes a 64b AXI multi-issue CPU bus architecture. The extensive hardware acceleration modules offer a Gigabit Ethernet MAC with an TCP/IP offload engine (TOE) that transfers at Ethernet line rates; a eight-channel, low-latency buffered memory controller supporting DDR2 memory bandwidth bursts at 12 Gb/s; eight separate DMA engines in multiple bus masters to transfer data without processor intervention; internal SRAM memory for storing frequently used data; a high-performance SATA controller with internal data buffers; and scatter/gather DMA controller, in-line encryption and RAID functions.

With this new NAS 7800 SoC family, PLX is extending its commitment to provide high-quality, cost effective reliable silicon to the world’s leading consumer storage ODMs and OEMs, but that’s only half of the solution,” said David Raun, vice president of marketing and business development at PLX. “All PLX storage devices are also backed by a comprehensive software/firmware package and an unmatched global technical support team that helps designers to differentiate their products and speed not just time to market but time to revenue.  This combined silicon and software offering is a total solution and a fundamental value-added benefit of using PLX’s world-renowned technology.”

Pricing and Availability:

General sampling and Rapid Development Kits (RDKs) are available in Q1’10, followed by full production in Q2’10. Volume unit pricing is $15 for the NAS 7825, $13 for the NAS 7821 and $11 for the NAS 7820.

Comments

These low prices are not for complete networked storage solutions but, even if you add the platform around these SoCs, it means that NAS are becoming more and more commodity products.

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