Industry News

Credo Introduces New Single-Channel 112G/s High-Speed Digital Signal Processing Retimer Chip - Screaming Eagle Single-Chip Transmission Rate Up to 1.6

Views : 13
Update time : 2022-10-18 10:59:28
        Credo (NASDAQ: CRDO) recently announced the release of the Screaming Eagle 112G LR (Long Range) digital signal processing Retimer chip with a capacity of up to 1.6Tbps. By supporting multiple port rates from 1.6T, 800G, 400G, 100G and down to 10G, the Screaming Eagle can meet the massive data transfer needs of many customers including super data centers, enterprises, 5G carriers and network service providers.
        Bandwidth is the catalyst of the digital economy," said Scott Feller, vice president of marketing at Credo. Our end customers require ever-increasing network speeds to support the extensive demands of data-intensive vertical markets, and Credo's unique SerDes design enables industry-leading performance, power efficiency and cost advantages for customers managing petabytes of information, such as mega data centers. Delivering 1.6 Tbps capacity has become a necessity as customer demand for network rates increases dramatically."

        Screaming Eagle is Credo's third generation 112G Retimer, supporting 40dB+ LR+ channels and enabling up to 1.6 Tbps of throughput on a single chip. The Screaming Eagle 1.6T chip is available in a 23x23mm package, the industry's smallest line card chip size.
        The importance of data connectivity is no longer limited to the Internet, it has become a key factor in supporting many industries such as healthcare, research, finance, government and manufacturing with complex data forms and parsing analysis," said Alan Weckel, 650 Group Principal. We are pleased that Credo has entered the 1.6Tbps product arena with its long-range products in a timely manner because, as we have seen, many industrial applications continue to collect large amounts of data, and these applications are then driving increased demand for higher speed and lower latency computing power."


 
Related News
Read More >>
How many chips does a car need? How many chips does a car need?
Sep .19.2024
Automotive chips can be divided into four types according to their functions: control (MCU and AI chips), power, sensors, and others (such as memory). The market is monopolized by international giants. The automotive chips people often talk about refer to
Position and Function of Main Automotive Sensors Position and Function of Main Automotive Sensors
Sep .18.2024
The function of the air flow sensor is to convert the amount of air inhaled into the engine into an electrical signal and provide it to the electronic control unit (ECU). It is the main basis for determining the basic fuel injection volume. Vane type: The
Chip: The increasingly intelligent electronic brain Chip: The increasingly intelligent electronic brain
Sep .14.2024
In this era of rapid technological development, we often marvel at how mobile phones can run various application software smoothly, how online classes can be free of lag and achieve zero latency, and how the functions of electronic devices are becoming mo
LDA100 Optocoupler: Outstanding Performance, Wide Applications LDA100 Optocoupler: Outstanding Performance, Wide Applications
Sep .13.2024
In terms of characteristics, LDA100 is outstanding. It offers AC and DC input versions for optional selection, enabling it to work stably in different power supply environments. The small 6-pin DIP package not only saves space but also facilitates install