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1T Samsung reviewed
MZ-76E1T0B/AM SSD 860 EVO 2.5" SATA III 1TB V-NAND Technology with Enhanced Read/Write Performance 5-Year Limited Manufacturer's Warranty Up to 8x higher TBW (Terabytes Written)* than the 850 EVO ....refined ECC* algorithm and a new MJX controller...improved queued trim enhances Linux compatibility. Warrantied TBW for 860 EVO: 600 TBW for 1 TB model ... and 2,400 TBW for 4 TB model. Wonder what TBW translates into my 128G Samsung 840 Evo;- all my drives are evidently MLC, however and although called VNAND in this (3-bit) iteration;- The recent HP 700 256G was at a point of change from planar MLC, on my model, to whatever they switched to short after and since - probably TLC. Arrived crushed with a ripped manila-bubbled envelope. Primo shipping aside, that's conditionally about $20 less than Amazon for Samsung's first time up under $100 on this drive;- contents were one crushed Samsung cardboard box corner with otherwise indications of genuine seals for relevant/contact warranty point of origin, in addition, which I'd mistaken for 3 years at half the TBW site specs. No protection for otherwise no evidence of a SSD physically busted in half or little bitty pieces. Production date 2019/10. Fresh off Korean assembly lines. Amen. Ser# listed and matched above model# w/UPC barcode;...screw the brochure if I'm inclined the site's not lying. Cursory full logical partition/OEM at FAT32 (NTFS is a terrorist bomb) is cursorily status fact a SDD, a third or less for fast computers, I don't build, compared to Samsung's testbed (an ASUS and so on it would appear) speed ratings. Fine. Works and highly likely gets it on for more and longer and better. I'd only rather killed this deal, the price I paid being nothing special to other than a slight clip skewed for 10% additional markup over the discounted holidays' deal I struck at. Beyond promoted pure for highest quality at somewhat a relevancy and discrepancy for lots of other brand values. I'd imagine. Think of this way: It's ordinarily four 256G drives for $25 each at the bottom-barrel TLC/QLC deals, except they're not and all Samsung's. |
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1T Samsung reviewed
On Wed, 04 Dec 2019 03:47:04 -0500, Flasherly
wrote: Oh, yeah: I maxed my MB's six SATA ports, not really caring about a PCI soundboard, at least on this system, and should probably remove it for its relative high-value on a SPDIF laser output used on another (with off-board DACs). Or, being more storage, explicitly, for a empty PCI slot, then, and spare controllers I could add-on to yet more drives;- USB3 drivers and BIOS switching to enable those ports, I have, over an updated array of faster futuristic docking options makes all the above somewhat redundant. I suppose I could just stuff it and build a Ryzen box for $100 (MB/CPU/MEM) on a dual boot W10 and LINUX/Redhat for something better to do. Or wait a little for the prices to optionally reach the right temperature for testing those Great Seas of Planned Obsolesce. |
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1T Samsung reviewed
On 12/4/2019 12:47 AM, Flasherly wrote:
MZ-76E1T0B/AM SSD 860 EVO 2.5" SATA III 1TB V-NAND Technology with Enhanced Read/Write Performance 5-Year Limited Manufacturer's Warranty Up to 8x higher TBW (Terabytes Written)* than the 850 EVO ...refined ECC* algorithm and a new MJX controller...improved queued trim enhances Linux compatibility. Warrantied TBW for 860 EVO: 600 TBW for 1 TB model ... and 2,400 TBW for 4 TB model. Wonder what TBW translates into my 128G Samsung 840 Evo;- all my drives are evidently MLC, however and although called VNAND in this (3-bit) iteration;- The recent HP 700 256G was at a point of change from planar MLC, on my model, to whatever they switched to short after and since - probably TLC. Arrived crushed with a ripped manila-bubbled envelope. Primo shipping aside, that's conditionally about $20 less than Amazon for Samsung's first time up under $100 on this drive;- contents were one crushed Samsung cardboard box corner with otherwise indications of genuine seals for relevant/contact warranty point of origin, in addition, which I'd mistaken for 3 years at half the TBW site specs. No protection for otherwise no evidence of a SSD physically busted in half or little bitty pieces. Production date 2019/10. Fresh off Korean assembly lines. Amen. Ser# listed and matched above model# w/UPC barcode;...screw the brochure if I'm inclined the site's not lying. Cursory full logical partition/OEM at FAT32 (NTFS is a terrorist bomb) is cursorily status fact a SDD, a third or less for fast computers, I don't build, compared to Samsung's testbed (an ASUS and so on it would appear) speed ratings. Fine. Works and highly likely gets it on for more and longer and better. I'd only rather killed this deal, the price I paid being nothing special to other than a slight clip skewed for 10% additional markup over the discounted holidays' deal I struck at. Beyond promoted pure for highest quality at somewhat a relevancy and discrepancy for lots of other brand values. I'd imagine. Think of this way: It's ordinarily four 256G drives for $25 each at the bottom-barrel TLC/QLC deals, except they're not and all Samsung's. On my new build, I opted for a PNY 1TB CS3030 NVME drive that is rated at 3500 MB/s read and 3000 write, with 1665 TBW and 5 year limited warranty, and am very happy with that. It is way faster than my previous SSD's. Going for less than $120 now. My "new" motherboard is a GA-Z270XP-SLI that I bought off Craigslist for $40 with a Celeron G3930 processor. I have modified the Bios to run an I7 8700K processor, which seems to work great on the board it is not supposed to even work on. This machine should last me a long time. Big step from my 2500K PC. Anyone wanting to know more, search for "Coffee lake mod for Kaby lake", especially on the win-raid site. |
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1T Samsung reviewed
On Mon, 9 Dec 2019 20:53:11 -0800, Bob F wrote:
On my new build, I opted for a PNY 1TB CS3030 NVME drive that is rated at 3500 MB/s read and 3000 write, with 1665 TBW and 5 year limited warranty, and am very happy with that. It is way faster than my previous SSD's. Going for less than $120 now. I'd planned on a SATA III 512G, but the difference between low-end 1T drives and big brandname 512G was close enough to where the Samsung 1T, at its first time below $100 just before the holiday, seemed good enough. Not many people can boot into a MSDOS disk and see a 1T FAT drive but I can (at slow "native" MB transfer speeds). Haven't looked at that specifically yet with the Samsung, but my other SSD drives show fine. Occasionally it comes in handy -- for a quick and dirty "backdoor". Numbered days, though, for such -- Linux and variants being increasing the only OS alternatives with continued active development on a "modern" platform. I've always liked boot arbitrators for multiple operating systems and got into it way back when with some of the first released MBR arbitrators technology. I watched Best Buy sell the same 512G Samsung model a week before I bought the 1T for $45: "Geek Squad refurbished" units. And they sold in hardly more than a day, with what people also want -- no hassle 30-day full returns basically to "try it out". Those are some good longevity numbers on the PNY, and it looks well reviewed in PCI-e M.2 standards. |
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