![]() Most days, a typical user doesn’t write even a tenth of that amount to an internal drive. ![]() That means you can write some 350GB on it per day and every day and get a replacement from Samsung if that makes the drive fails before the 5-year mark. Specifically, you can write up to 600TB of data on the 1TB version before it becomes unreliable. The endurance rating remains the same, capacity by capacity, however. Read this Synology DSM 7.0 Now Available as Public Beta Again, I find it surprising that it still uses PCIe Gen 3.0 instead of PCIe Gen 4.0, a much higher performance ceiling. Like the 970 EVO, the Samsung 980 NVMe SSD uses the popular M.2 2280, single-sided design - it’ll fit in most if not all NVMe applications. Samsung 970 EVO A typical PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD with now-familiar endurance rating The 1TB, for example, costs some $30 less than the 970 EVO counterpart today. However, the new drive has a few new things and one strong selling point: It’s much more affordable. On top of that, its performance is not consistently rated higher, either. For one, its capacities cap at just 1TB, half of the older cousin. The new Samsung 980 isn’t overall better than the older model. Samsung 980 NVMe SSD: The 970 EVO’s welcome alternative Samsung 980 NVMe SSD: Consistently excellent performance.Host Memory Buffer with Full Power Mode.Samsung’s first DRAM-less NVME that rocks. ![]() A typical PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD with now-familiar endurance rating.Samsung 980 NVMe SSD: The 970 EVO’s welcome alternative.
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