cdmagurus.com
12-16-2016, 11:20 AM
When I was testing Samsung’s new 960 Pro M.2/NVMe SSD, a coworker looking over my shoulder at the results declared, “That’s sick!” High praise in today’s parlance, and a direct response to this drive’s incredible speed. It’s a phrase I continued to voice silently as I saw read and write numbers of 2.7GBps and 1.7GBps, respectively, pop up. And that was from the super-conservative AS SSD benchmark with non-compressible data; CrystalDiskMark 5 boasted reads and writes of 3.5GBps and 2.17GBps, respectively, with a 2GB data set. Whoa.
Price and capacityAt the time of this writing, the 960 Pro is priced around 63 to 72 cents per gigabyte on Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-960-PRO-Internal-MZ-V6P1T0BW/dp/B01LYRCIPG%3Fpsc%3D1%26SubscriptionId%3DAKIAIRZJHS P2SKQIWVZA%26tag%3Dpcworld02-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165 953%26creativeASIN%3DB01LYRCIPG): $372 for the 512GB version, $630 for the 1TB model, and $1,299 for the 2TB version. That’s right, there’s a 2TB model thanks to the Samsung 3D/stacked-layer NAND employed on the drives. If you’ve been holding off on M.2/NVMe because of the relatively low capacity (1TB isn’t enough?) then the 960 Pro should eliminate that argument, if not the cost issue.
To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here (http://cdmagurus.com/article/3131625/storage/samsung-960-pro-nvme-ssd-review-ludicrously-fast-pc-storage.html#jump)
More... (http://www.pcworld.com/article/3131625/storage/samsung-960-pro-nvme-ssd-review-ludicrously-fast-pc-storage.html#tk.rss_all)
Price and capacityAt the time of this writing, the 960 Pro is priced around 63 to 72 cents per gigabyte on Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-960-PRO-Internal-MZ-V6P1T0BW/dp/B01LYRCIPG%3Fpsc%3D1%26SubscriptionId%3DAKIAIRZJHS P2SKQIWVZA%26tag%3Dpcworld02-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165 953%26creativeASIN%3DB01LYRCIPG): $372 for the 512GB version, $630 for the 1TB model, and $1,299 for the 2TB version. That’s right, there’s a 2TB model thanks to the Samsung 3D/stacked-layer NAND employed on the drives. If you’ve been holding off on M.2/NVMe because of the relatively low capacity (1TB isn’t enough?) then the 960 Pro should eliminate that argument, if not the cost issue.
To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here (http://cdmagurus.com/article/3131625/storage/samsung-960-pro-nvme-ssd-review-ludicrously-fast-pc-storage.html#jump)
More... (http://www.pcworld.com/article/3131625/storage/samsung-960-pro-nvme-ssd-review-ludicrously-fast-pc-storage.html#tk.rss_all)