• Stop press! Heres the cheapest 2TB NVMe SSD Ive ever seen

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Sun Apr 30 06:15:03 2023
    Stop press! Heres the cheapest 2TB NVMe SSD Ive ever seen

    Date:
    Sun, 30 Apr 2023 04:55:08 +0000

    Description:
    Snatch this Silicon Power 2TB NVMe SSD for only $75, making it the ideal secondary drive.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    Amazon is selling a 2TB Silicon Power NVMe SSD (SP002TBP34A60M28) for just under $74.99 , a price that includes free shipping in the US and the option for up to three year data recovery plan for a mere $14.99 extra (worth taking it in case something goes wrong). This is the cheapest 2TB NVMe SSD right now on the market, joint with the Teamgroup MP33 (TM8FP6002T0C101).

    (Note: the price of this SSD is in US Dollars but Amazon ships internationally and you should be able to purchase it either for the same price or for a small premium depending on where you live)

    It uses the older PCIe 3.0 protocol (were on PCIe 5.0) which is why this SSD would be ideal either as a secondary drive (great if your laptop has a spare secondary port) or as a portable SSD (when paired with an appropriate
    external enclosure). It has a modest performance - due to the lack of DRAM - which is more than adequate when dealing with small files. Silicon Powers SSD is both faster and has a higher warranty than Teamgroups:
    2.3GBps/1.6GBps/1200 vs 1.8GBps/1.5GBps/1000 (read/write/TBW). Our cloud storage guides (Image credit: Image by Wilfried from Pixabay )

    Best cloud storage : Expand your storage easily
    Best cloud backup : Protect your data on the go
    Best cloud storage for photos : Space for your photos
    Best business cloud storage : Data resilience for business
    Best free cloud storage : Bits and bytes online for free

    Our peers at Tomshardware reviewed a smaller model back in January 2020 (when the 1TB version cost, ahem, $95) and loved its black PCB as well as its efficiency but flagged its slow direct-to-TLC write speed. They still gave it a solid four star (out of five). Check out their review of the Silicon Power P34A60 . Note that it uses TLC NAND chips which means that it doesnt suffer from disadvantages associated with QLC . If youre looking for something speedier?

    Solidigm is clearing out old Intel SSD with the 670p selling for $75.99 ,
    just a dollar more than its Silicon Power rival. It is much faster (3.5GBps/2.7GBps on read/write); however because it uses QLC, its endurance
    is lower at just 740TBW, almost 40% less than Silicon Powers. Just bear in mind though that when it launched in February 2021, just over two years ago, it retailed for a staggering $330.

    The 670p is one of the fastest PCIe 3.0 drives around so you have to move to PCIe 4.0 SSDs to get even faster models. The Fanxiang S660, currently available at Amazon for $79.19 with a 10% discount voucher, is the fastest cheap SSD we could find, thanks in part to its SLC cache. It claims to
    deliver read/write speeds of 4.8GBps/4.2GBps with a 5-year/1400 TBW warranty. We like the act that it comes with a bundled heatsink (great for PS5 SSD upgrades) but others will balk at the lack of reviews and brand pedigree from this Chinese company. Want to buy something even faster?

    At just under $98 (down from $111.99 after a 10% discount coupon), the S770 (the faster sibling of the aforementioned S660) is the fastest SSD under
    $100. We havent found an independent review of the S770 (or indeed any Fanxiang SSD) but the numbers that this SSD brings to the table are ludicrously good - at least on paper: its 7.3GBps/6.8GBps read/write speeds with 1400 TBW make it almost as good as the Samsung 990 Pro. It comes with
    2GB DRAM and uses 128-layer YMTC NAND and like the S660, has a heatsink.



    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/news/stop-press-heres-the-cheapest-2tb-nvme-ssd-ive- ever-seen


    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)