Categories: EnterpriseNetworking

Supermicro Announces New 25G Ethernet Technology

Today Super Micro Computer, Inc. announced new 25G Ethernet Networking technology that will help the industry that is rapidly transitioning to higher network speeds. Supermicro is announcing new NICs and top of the rack (ToR) switches as well as a new switch with its X11 SuperBlade. These new products help set companies up on the path to 100G.


Today Super Micro Computer, Inc. announced new 25G Ethernet Networking technology that will help the industry that is rapidly transitioning to higher network speeds. Supermicro is announcing new NICs and top of the rack (ToR) switches as well as a new switch with its X11 SuperBlade. These new products help set companies up on the path to 100G.

CPUs, Memory, and storage are just getting faster and faster. This shifts the bottleneck around and it is starting to land more and more on networking. If companies want to deliver overall improvements in performance they will have to start looking at faster networking and the first step is shifting to 25G Ethernet with eyes up the road to tackle upcoming issues and technologies. Transition from 10G to 25G can deliver 2.5x the performance for roughly the same price.

To aide companies in their transition to 25G, Supermicro is offering a wide range of 25G NIC solutions. These products are dual speed (operating at both 10G and 25G) making them a good fit for organizations in transition. If companies installed them now on their 10G network they would only need a configuration update to use them in a future 25G network.

For those that need a 25G switch, Supermicro is announcing its new SSE-F3548S 25G. This 48-port witch is cost-competitive with six uplinks of 100G; the uplinks can be split by four to support as many as 72 connections at 25G. The company also currently offers a 100G ToR switch with the SSE-C3632S. Specific to X11 SuperBlade users is the SBM-25G-100 ToR switch. This switch features twenty 25G downlink connections, four QSFP28 ports where each port can be configured as 40G or 100G uplink connections.

Supermicro

Discuss this story

Sign up for the StorageReview newsletter

Adam Armstrong

Adam is the chief news editor for StorageReview.com, managing our internal and freelance content teams.

Recent Posts

iXsystems Expands TrueNAS Enterprise with H-Series Platforms

iXsystems has launched the TrueNAS Enterprise H-Series platforms, designed to give organizations ultimate performance. The H10 model is now available,…

19 hours ago

Microsoft Azure Edge Infrastructure At Hannover Messe 2024

Hannover Messe 2024 represents a significant event in the global industrial sector, serving as the world's largest industrial trade fair.…

19 hours ago

IBM Storage Assurance Program Provides Purchase Protection and Flexibility

The IBM Storage Assurance program offers access to the latest FlashSystem hardware and software, supporting investment protection from day one.…

23 hours ago

Proxmox Backup Server 3.2 Adds Advanced Notification System and Automated Installations

Proxmox Backup Server 3.2 has been released - open-source solution designed for backup of VMs, containers, and physical hosts. (more…)

2 days ago

IBM FlashSystem 5300 Entry All-Flash Array Launched

IBM has unveiled the FlashSystem 5300, setting a new standard for entry-level all-flash storage systems by providing impressive performance, high…

2 days ago

Proxmox VE 8.2 Introduces VMware Import Wizard, Enhanced Backup Options, and Advanced GUI Features

Proxmox Server Solutions has released the latest update to their server virtualization management platform, Proxmox VE 8.2. (more…)

3 days ago