Before Samsung 9100 pro series Solid-state drives (SSD) include the first consumer-grade 8TB NVME SSD. Latest models use PCIE 5.0 fast standard, where – unless you AI models practice For a lifetime – almost certainly too much for your PC needs.
The Samsung 9100 Pro Series offers until its predecessor has doubled, The line of 990 pro. It was launched in 1TB, 2TB and 4TB models, with 8TBs that would not come until late this year. Each tier ship in models with and without heatsink (if you need to depend on whether your motherboard includes one for the NVME drive).
The company said the 9100 Pro SSD had a series of speed reading of up to 14,800 MB/s and a series of writing speeds of up to 13,400 MB/s. Their random reading speed is as fast as 2,200k IOPs (input-output per second), with a random writing speed up to 2,600k IOPs. The company said the 9100 Pro SSD is up to 49 percent better power than the 990 pro line and profile as slim as 0.35 inches (around 8.9mm).
But as Igor Bonifacic by Engadget Write to our SSD purchase guideVery few real-world use cases request those speeds. (Imagine people who practice in large AI models and so on.) As standing, PCIE 4.0 drives The benchmark is more than what most players and other consumer users need. They also cost about half.
The first 9100 Pro SSD arrived in March: 1TB ($ 200), 2TB ($ 300) and 4TB ($ 550). Variants with an heatsink will tack an extra $ 20 in prices. As for the 8TB tier, which Samsung did not announce, it would not come until the second half of the year.
This article originally appeared on the Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/accessories/samsungs-9100-pro-sd-line-scludes-its-first-8tb-nvme-modeel-for-consumers- 205727818.html? SRC = RSS