SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 19, 2025--
Next week at HPE ® Discover Las Vegas 2025, KIOXIA America, Inc., the inventor of NAND flash memory, will showcase how its industry-leading flash storage solutions are helping modernize IT infrastructures across cloud, AI, and hybrid environments—from the edge to the data center, and even into space.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250619093841/en/
A recognized leader in flash storage and SSD technologies, KIOXIA continues to drive the industry forward with advancements making use of PCIe ® 5.0 technology, Enterprise and Datacenter Standard Form Factor (EDSFF), and 24G SAS (SAS-4). These innovations enable higher performance, increased density, and improved energy efficiency—helping customers lower total cost of ownership while advancing infrastructure optimization. As a longtime HPE collaborator, KIOXIA supports HPE’s mission to accelerate data-first modernization. KIOXIA’s best-in-class SSDs power a wide range of HPE solutions including enterprise servers, storage, and modern data centers—delivering consistent performance from the edge to the cloud.
At this year’s event, KIOXIA will also highlight its contributions to the HPE Spaceborne Computer-2 project, which leverages KIOXIA SSDs to enable cutting-edge research in a test environment aboard the International Space Station (ISS).
“Each year, at HPE Discover Las Vegas, HPE underscores how collaboration can drive digital transformation,” said Neville Ichhaporia, senior vice president and general manager of the KIOXIA SSD Business Unit. “At this year’s event, KIOXIA is proud to highlight how our innovations are accelerating customer workloads, increasing storage efficiency, and supporting HPE’s vision for AI-ready infrastructure—on Earth and beyond.”
KIOXIA will demonstrate its latest technologies in booth #3010 at the Venetian ® Conference and Expo Center in Las Vegas from June 23–26.
Live Booth Demonstrations Featuring HPE ProLiant:
Other On-Site Demos:
New Product Highlights:
KIOXIA will spotlight recently launched SSDs engineered for HPE platforms and enterprise performance:
KIOXIA will participate in several speaking sessions and panel discussions that focus on its new products and its longstanding collaboration with HPE, including:
Breakout Session: "HPE and KIOXIA: Proven Data Storage from the Data Center to Outer Space"
June 24 at 2:30pm (Veronese 2403) and June 25 at 3:00pm (Titian 2301B)
Dr. Mark Fernandez, Principal Investigator for Spaceborne Computer-2 at HPE, explores the HPE and KIOXIA collaboration on both Earth and in space—from the Spaceborne Computer-2 project aboard the ISS to next-stage space missions. The session also discusses the critical role SSDs play in enabling next-gen workloads and sustainable storage.
Expo Hall AI Theater Session: "KIOXIA and HPE: Innovation from the Data Center to Space"
June 25 at 11:00am
Dr. Fernandez explains how HPE and KIOXIA are working together to bring compute to space through the Spaceborne Computer project enabling advanced research on the International Space Station. This session also introduces KIOXIA’s new SSD, and describes the collaboration with HPE to usher in the next phase of digital transformation in data centers.
KIOXIA is also sponsoring the HPE Discover 2025 Welcome Reception and Celebration Event at Sphere, headlined by Kenny Chesney.
For more information, please visit www.kioxia.com, and follow the company on X, formerly known as Twitter and LinkedIn®.
About KIOXIA America, Inc.
KIOXIA America, Inc. is the U.S.-based subsidiary of KIOXIA Corporation, a leading worldwide supplier of flash memory and solid-state drives (SSDs). From the invention of flash memory to today’s breakthrough BiCS FLASH™ 3D technology, KIOXIA continues to pioneer innovative memory, SSD and software solutions that enrich people's lives and expand society's horizons. The company's innovative 3D flash memory technology, BiCS FLASH, is shaping the future of storage in high-density applications, including advanced smartphones, PCs, automotive systems, data centers and generative AI systems. For more information, please visit KIOXIA.com.
© 2025 KIOXIA America, Inc. All rights reserved. Information in this press release, including product pricing and specifications, content of services, and contact information is current and believed to be accurate on the date of the announcement, but is subject to change without prior notice. Technical and application information contained here is subject to the most recent applicable KIOXIA product specifications.
Notes:
HPE and ProLiant are registered trademarks of Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company and/or its affiliates.
The Venetian Resort Hotel Casino is a trademark of LAS VEGAS SANDS CORP.
The NVMe word mark is a registered or unregistered trademark or service mark of NVM Express, Inc. in the United States and other countries.
PCI Express and PCIe are registered trademarks of PCI-SIG.
LinkedIn is a trademark of LinkedIn Corporation and its affiliates in the United States and/or other countries.
Definition of capacity: KIOXIA Corporation defines a megabyte (MB) as 1,000,000 bytes, a gigabyte (GB) as 1,000,000,000 bytes and a terabyte (TB) as 1,000,000,000,000 bytes. A computer operating system, however, reports storage capacity using powers of 2 for the definition of 1GB = 2^30 bytes = 1,073,741,824 bytes and 1TB = 2^40 bytes = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes and therefore shows less storage capacity. Available storage capacity (including examples of various media files) will vary based on file size, formatting, settings, software and operating system, and/or pre-installed software applications, or media content. Actual formatted capacity may vary.
Other company names, product names and service names may be trademarks of third-party companies.
KIOXIA’s best-in-class SSDs power a wide range of HPE solutions including enterprise servers, storage, and modern data centers—delivering consistent performance from the edge to the cloud.
The man suspected in last weekend's attack at Brown University and the fatal shooting of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor days later had been dead for two days when found, an autopsy determined.
Authorities found Claudio Neves Valente dead at a New Hampshire storage facility on Thursday night.
New Hampshire’s attorney general announced Friday that Neves Valente, a Portuguese national who had been living in the U.S., died on Tuesday, the same day that his countryman, MIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro died at a hospital.
Authorities believe that after killing two students and wounding nine others at Brown last Saturday, Neves Valente shot Loureiro at his Boston-area home on Monday night.
Neves Valente and Loureiro had attended the same school in the 1990s, though authorities haven't said why they think he killed the professor.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.
Investigators on Friday were trying to sort out why a former Brown University student allegedly opened fire on the campus decades after he dropped out and later gunned down an esteemed Massachusetts college professor he attended school with in Portugal in the 1990s.
Claudio Neves Valente, who, like Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro, was a Portuguese national living in the U.S., was found dead Thursday night from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, said Providence's police chief, Col. Oscar Perez.
The discovery of the 48-year-old Neves Valente's body at a New Hampshire storage facility ended the nearly weeklong hunt for the person who killed two students and wounded nine others in a Brown lecture hall last Saturday. Investigators believe the onetime Brown student killed Loureiro in his home in Brookline, a Boston suburb about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Providence, on Monday. Perez said as far as investigators know, Neves Valente acted alone.
Portugal’s foreign minister, Paulo Rangel, said Friday that the government was taken aback by revelations that a Portuguese man is the main suspect in the mass shooting at Brown and the killing of Loureiro. Police in Portugal said they were contacted by U.S. authorities Thursday once Neves Valente was named.
Rangel said Portugal has provided “very broad cooperation” in the case. He said in comments to the national news agency Lusa that “the investigation is far from over.”
Brown University President Christina Paxson said Neves Valente was enrolled there as a graduate student studying physics from the fall of 2000 to the spring of 2001.
“He has no current affiliation with the university,” she said.
Neves Valente and Loureiro attended the same academic program at a university in Portugal between 1995 and 2000, U.S. attorney for Massachusetts Leah B. Foley said. Loureiro graduated from the physics program at Instituto Superior Técnico, Portugal’s premier engineering school, in 2000, according to his MIT faculty page. That same year, Neves Valente was let go from his temporary student support and faculty liaison position at the Lisbon university, according to an archive of a termination notice from the school’s president at the time.
Neves Valente, who was born in Torres Novas, Portugal, about 75 miles (121 kilometers) north of Lisbon, had come to Brown on a student visa. He eventually obtained legal permanent resident status in September 2017, Foley said. It wasn't immediately clear where he was between taking a leave of absence from the school in 2001 and getting the visa in 2017. His last known residence was in Miami.
After officials revealed the suspect's identity, President Donald Trump suspended the green card lottery program that allowed Neves Valente to stay in the United States.
There are still “a lot of unknowns” in regard to motive, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha said. “We don’t know why now, why Brown, why these students and why this classroom,” he said.
The FBI previously said it knew of no links between the Rhode Island and Massachusetts shootings.
Police credited a person who had several encounters with Neves Valente for providing a crucial tip that led authorities to him.
After police shared security video of a person of interest, the witness — known only as “John” in a Providence police affidavit — recognized him and posted his suspicions on the social media forum Reddit. Reddit users urged him to tell the FBI, and John said he did.
John said he encountered Neves Valente about two hours before the attack in a bathroom in the engineering building, which was where the shooting occurred, and noticed he was wearing inappropriate clothing for the weather, according to the affidavit. Still before the attack, he again bumped into Neves Valente a couple blocks away and saw him suddenly turn away from a Nissan sedan when he saw John.
“When you do crack it, you crack it. And that person led us to the car, which led us to the name,” Neronha said.
His tip pointed investigators to a Nissan Sentra with Florida plates. That enabled Providence police to tap into a network of more than 70 street cameras operated around the city by surveillance company Flock Safety. Those cameras track license plates and other vehicle details.
After leaving Rhode Island, Providence officials said Neves Valente stuck a Maine license plate over his rental car’s plate to help conceal his identity.
Investigators found footage of Neves Valente entering an apartment building near Loureiro's in a Boston suburb. About an hour later, Neves Valente was seen entering the Salem, New Hampshire, storage facility where he was found dead, Foley said. He had with him a satchel and two firearms, Neronha said.
Loureiro, a 47-year-old physicist and fusion scientist, joined MIT in 2016 and was named last year to lead the school’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center, one of its largest laboratories. The scientist from Viseu, Portugal, had been working to explain the physics behind astronomical phenomena such as solar flares.
In Lisbon, he was remembered as a highly regarded researcher and instructor for “all the contributions he gave and what he could still have given, all the equations left unwritten,” said Professor Bruno Gonçalves, head of the Institute for Plasmas and Nuclear Fusion at Instituto Superior Técnico.
Gonçalves added, “It is difficult to imagine in what context someone would want to harm someone that works in this field.”
The two Brown students killed during a study session for final exams were 19-year-old sophomore Ella Cook and 18-year-old freshman MukhammadAziz Umurzokov. Cook was active in her Alabama church and served as vice president of the Brown College Republicans. Umurzokov’s family immigrated to the U.S. from Uzbekistan when he was a child, and he aspired to be a doctor.
As for the wounded, three had been discharged and six were in stable condition Thursday, officials said.
Although Brown officials say there are 1,200 cameras on campus, the attack happened in an older part of the engineering building that has few, if any, cameras. And investigators believe the shooter entered and left through a door that faces a residential street bordering campus, which might explain why the cameras Brown does have didn’t capture footage of the person.
Associated Press reporters Barry Hatton and Helena Alves in Lisbon, Portugal, Mark Scolforo in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Audrey McAvoy in Honolulu, Hallie Golden in Seattle and Matt O'Brien in Providence contributed.
A woman lights a candle at a memorial set up in front of the Barus and Holley engineering building at Brown University in Providence, RI, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/ Mark Stockwell)
Law enforcement officers search the area for the Brown University shooting suspect, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025, in Salem, N.H. (AP Photo/Reba Saldanha)
FILE - People hold candles during a vigil in Providence, R.I., for those injured or killed in the previous day's shooting on the campus of Brown University, Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)
Law enforcement officers are seen outside a storage facility where a suspect in the shooting at Brown University was found dead, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025, in Salem, N.H. (AP Photo/Reba Saldanha)