Saturday, July 30, 2011

Production of Apple Thunderbolt Accessories Begins to Heat Up.

Currently there isn't much on the market for Thunderbolt Accessories for Apple computers, but a few Thunderbolt peripherals have finally become available for consumer hands. Some critiques cite Thunderbolt's development as similar to FireWire (an excellent idea that possibly will go nowhere), but many computer users remain optimistic. With its 10 Gbps potential bandwidth Thunderbolt accessories still could stand to redefine high-speed functionality for external computer accessories. 

The first major Thunderbolt peripheral to be released is the Promise Pegasus Thunderbolt enclosure for RAID. Their lineup of Thunderbolt arrays consist of two lines of 4 and 6 hard drive external enclosures. The small unit (the Pegasus R4) comes in a 4 and 8 TB configuration, while the more powerful Promise Pegasus R6 delivers either 6 or 8 terabytes of Thunderbolt storage. The Promise Pegasus Box is the first Thunderbolt RAID drive enclosure to be shipped for Mac, but many other models are soon to follow (such as the upcoming Sonnet Fusion RAID Thunderbolt Array).

External Thunderbolt hard drives shouldn't be too far off either. LaCie has announced development of the Little Big Disk, a high capacity mobile Thunderbolt hard disk (available with solid state drives or standard hard drives). While other companies have claimed support of the Thunderbolt port, LaCie is the only once currently set to release product with the summer of 2011.


Thunderbolt cables have been released for the few existing products. As of right now the only manufacturer is Apple itself, making it a very pricey 6 ft Thunderbolt copper cable (around $50). However, this cable works not only as a high-speed data transfer line for external Thunderbolt accessories, it functions as an HDMI to HDMI cable. A Thunderbolt cable may also be use to activate target disk mode in order to boot one Thunderbolt mac from another. Unlike the previous MiniDisplayPort cabling, the Thunderbolt wire relies on active cabling. This, combined with firmware in the cable, make its impossible to use anything but an actual Thunderbolt cable with such devices.

Thunderbolt adapters are quasi-developed. Intel Thunderbolt theoretically has the potential to be compatible with most device interfaces (with the proper converter), but definite release of these Thunderbolt adapters has been slow (to type the least). Matrox has announced support for Thunderbolt on their MX02 Family of devices by September of 2011, and its hoped that some other units like Thunderbolt to FireWire adapters have become available around then as well.


About the most developed of Thunderbolt devices is the Thunderbolt computers themselves. The new interface for founds its way into the majority of Apples computer lineups. Currently the only Apples not featuring Mac Thunderbolt are the top of the line Mac Pro machine (but those should see an update sometime soon…).

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