Samsung's Portable SSD T1 Tested 105
MojoKid writes The bulk of today's high-capacity external storage devices still rely on mechanical hard disk drives with spinning media and other delicate parts. Solid state drives are much faster and less susceptible to damage from vibration, of course. That being the case, Samsung saw an opportunity to capitalize on a market segment that hasn't seen enough development it seems--external SSDs. There are already external storage devices that use full-sized SSDs, but Samsung's new Portable SSD T1 is more akin to a thumb drive, only a little wider and typically much faster. Utilizing Samsung's 3D Vertical NAND (V-NAND) technology and a SuperSpeed USB 3.0 interface, the Portable SSD T1 redlines at up to 450MB/s when reading or writing data sequentially, claims Samsung. For random read and write activities, Samsung rates the drive at up to 8,000 IOPS and 21,000 IOPS, respectively. Pricing is more in-line with high-performance standalone SSDs, with this 1TB model reviewed here arriving at about $579. In testing, the drive did live up to its performance and bandwidth claims as well.
no (Score:5, Interesting)
regular ssd, usb3 interface, UASP (scsi over usb, new standard) and you have all the speed of native sata (that the drives can put out) and are still vendor neutral.
I try to avoid samsung products these days. after the fiasco with the evo drives, I'll look for another vendor.
and then there is always the worry that samsung will insert commercials between disk block seeks (inside joke, sorry if that does not make immediate sense to you).
Re:no (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm more concerned with Samsung uploading an incremental mirror of your hard drive to its cloud.
(ditto inside joke thing).
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Re:no (Score:5, Insightful)
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The 840 EVO performance issue was fixed with a firmware update.
Based on my research at www.slashdot.org all that update did was upload your data to Samsung and kill one kitten per 10000 IOPS. I wouldn't trust Samsung to get anything right. If you want some true reliability from an amazing vendor who never does consumers any wrongs, buy OCZ instead.
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If you want some true reliability from an amazing vendor who never does consumers any wrongs, buy OCZ instead.
Every time I buy an OCZ flash drive it dies, you insensitive clod! I bought an ATV and it died and they replaced it with a Rally2 which died and now I have another Rally2 which will probably die
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It seems your sarcasm detector also died. ;-)
Actually funny story I seem to be the only person in the entire world who still has a working OCZ drive. (touch wood)
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Make that two :p
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Make that three. My OCZ Vertex II is still happily chugging along after a couple of years of use.
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do OCZ 8GB USB flash drives count?
Six years and counting.
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It seems your sarcasm detector also died. ;-)
No, just my humor generation module. I needed some more humorous phrases, I guess. I'm well aware that OCZ has a well-earned reputation for failure.
Re:no (Score:5, Informative)
SCSI over USB only really adds queuing, improving speed when many small reads/writes are performed, and you'd need an SSD supporting SCSI and an enclosure/adapter supporting SCSI over USB. Further, for large transfers plain USB 3 is just as fast, while having the benefit of being cheaper, and more readily available and compatible than SCSI over USB. Of course, straight SATA III (via eSATA if you want) is still faster.
USB 3 gets you 5 Gbps and has to be handled by the CPU.
SATA III gets you 6 Gbps without going through the CPU.
USB 3.1 promises to get you 10 Gbps (and lower overhead), but still has to go through the CPU.
And Thunderbolt is just a convoluted and expensive way of piping a limited number of PCIe lanes to a random physical port and requiring the user to buy an expensive cable. 10 Gbps or 20 Gbps. 40 Gbps in the next revision.
SATA Express / M.2 can get you 32 Gbps using 4 PCIe 3.0 lanes or 2 PCIe 4.0 lanes wrapped up in NVMe.
And you can always just throw more PCIe lanes at some controller (on-board or an via a PCIe slot) or some device directly if you want more bandwidth.
USB 3 will be the standard for external shit for a long time. The C connector and USB 3.1 are going to have a hell of a time gaining traction.
For people who want performance, SATA Express / M.2 using NVMe or other direct PCIe solutions win.
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Only problem is, where are all the NVMe M.2 SSDs I can buy? 3rd gen?
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USB3 supports DMA-ish transfer modes that let you bypass the CPU. USB 3.1 is said to support even more (And a lot of cool things like actual standards for implementing HDMI and displayport over the reversible type C connector).
USB3 is a lot more than just a fast USB 2. There's been a lot added to make it better, faster.
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Re:no (Score:5, Interesting)
even further back. I have three Adaptec SCSI-to-USB adapters - actually physical pin-compatibility adapters. I've had those since probably 2005 or even before. They'll mount on pretty much anything I plug them into, from Windows ME through 7, OSX from Tiger/PPC (the one I've tried it on), and several flavours of Linux from around Knoppix 5.1.1 and I can still read every hard drive I still own from a 10MB 40-pin Winchester through the pile of 500GB Deskstars, several Seagate 9.1GB UW ans a good few 50-pin random and various capacity drives - not forgetting of course, the takep drives, slot loading and cassette DVD/R/RW/RAM drives and my pride and joy of MO gear that still works: a custom cased LS120/Zip100 triple threat (it reads 3.5" floppies, too!). All USB mass storage is really just SCSI layer on the USB stack.
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shitme beers, ignore the typos, extremely tired at this point...
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I'm just a poor researcher, I have to make do with what I have - my first priority is feeding myself.
NSA Backdoor preinstalled? (Score:5, Interesting)
NSA Backdoor preinstalled?
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https://www.reddit.com/r/news/comments/2w4ihb/kaspersky_labs_has_uncovered_a_malware_publisher/
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A TB has already been done in SLC, that isn't hard to do... it is however enterprise only and very expensive, thus not of much interest to your average user...
It isn't going to be something that you see for your personal use.
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A TB has already been done in SLC, that isn't hard to do... it is however enterprise only and very expensive, thus not of much interest to your average user...
It isn't going to be something that you see for your personal use.
Why not? I want multi TB SSD in full size HDD boxes, that can go into standard PC drive slots. Drives fail, even SSDs. I want to mirror them. 1TB MLC SSDs exist. Put them in a bigger box.
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because there aren't enough people in the consumer market willing to pay the many thousands of dollars price tag on such devices. until cost comes down the market is simply too small to target that audience.
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The price is dropping. I'm seeing MacBook Pros ship with 1TB of SSD. It only is a matter of time before external SSDs become the storage medium of choice, just like USB flash drives are for small scale storage.
As for HDDs, I can see them winding up being re-engineered to be more for archival and backup storage as opposed to the role an external HDD does now.
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The problem with this is that external storage is often not powered for considerable time and high density Flash retention time is abysmal compared to other media types. I have already had USB flash drives "forget" their contents within months unless continuously scrubbed which annoyingly they do not even do if left powered but not accessed.
Samsung's 3D NAND Flash sh
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I could. But the price for 1TB 2.5" SSD ain't right yet. So I guess we're just arguing over the price.
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OK, I take that back, I just looked at newegg. Prices are about 50% of what I expected.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/... [newegg.com]
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I suspect the market isn't there yet for 4 TB SSD drives... and it wouldn't require a 3.5" drive case, you could fit 4 TB of NAND easily in a 2.5" drive case (or even less).
That said, the number of people who want to pay $2,000 for such a drive are still quite limited. Give it time...
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Well right now, the 1TB enterprise quality SSDs have dropped below $900 (5 year warranty, super-caps, etc.). They're quickly edging out the 15k RPM SAS drives.
Consider that if I need X IOPS and a TB of capacity, I can either put 2x1TB SSD into a server and spend about $1800-ish. Or I can buy a more expensive RAID controller and tr
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Yup. I wouldn't pay $1000 for a drive. I just need to wait for the prices to drop.
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Danger of SSDs (Score:3, Interesting)
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Anecdotes be anecdotes, I guess..
Re: Danger of SSDs (Score:1)
It will only occur if writes are in-flight during he outage. I don't have much experience with Intel devices - I haven't seen failures with them - but the have the same vulnerability.
Re: Danger of SSDs (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: Danger of SSDs (Score:1)
That's exactly the reason. But articles like this don't mention if this drive is protected or not. Most are not.
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I'm also not concerned with losing data during a write, I just don't want to
Re: Danger of SSDs (Score:1)
Yep - it's think kind of thing that causes the issue. The problem is less about if your data is in the cache (like can happen with an HD) - but if the remapping tables themselves (metadata) is in there - which it typically has to be - to prevent write amplification.
They *could* protect with sufficient capacitance to hold the power up long enough to do an emergency "write flush" - but DO they? I don't know. Like I said - articles really need to discuss this - as do the manufacturers.
Re: Danger of SSDs (Score:5, Interesting)
I was reading about Samsung's "RAPID Mode" that uses system memory as a write cache to speed up writes to the SSD. One of the topics about "RAPID Mode", which is even more sensitive to power loss because of increase caching, is that it handles power loss "well". They have done extensive testing with "RAPID Mode" and power loss. I figure if they can offer 10 year warranties and feel confident about these issues, I'll trust them until proven otherwise. They have a great track record. I still wouldn't put all of my eggs in one basket.
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I thought this was the reason a lot of SSDs now have a collection of capacitors to finish out the writes with in the event of a power loss?
Has anyone actually tested that? There has to be some power filtering caps but is there really a write-flush cap, and does the controller actually go in a state where it recognizes "Gee, Mr. McDee, we're going down, gotta do these panic writes".
Of course enterprise storage systems have implemented things like that for ages, but is that mechanism actually present in random consumer/prosumer SSDs?
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That is luck...
I worked on a project about 15 years ago that shipped about 8meg of flash on an onboard truck device.
We had about 20% fail rate per year (yeah it was very expensive). Pretty much every one of them was returned because of non bootup, they were corrupt. Reflash it and it would come back to life. We would ship it back out as a refurb and it would be back in 2-3 months. The only way we could reproduce it in the lab was power flickage. Not completely off (though we suspected that would happen
Re:Danger of SSDs (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder if the latest generation of filesystems like ZFS, btrfs, and ReFS would be useful, so a corrupt file that wasn't completely written would be detected by the FS during a background scrub or garbage collection task. With RAID-Z, the corruption can be found. Z2, the corruption likely can be fixed.
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Re:Danger of SSDs (Score:5, Funny)
Intel 5400 RPM enterprise SSDs are the industry leader. I've never had issues with the ones I have.
I keep mine on a 33 1/3 RPM turntable. Less centrifugal force. Damn cables keep getting tangled though.
WTF?
Re:Danger of SSDs (Score:5, Funny)
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Most modern SSDs have power loss protection. If it was that easy to lose all your data, no one would be using these things.
I've had power failures, and computers lock up, no data lost...
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It's not something to freak out too much about(most HDDs have somewhere between 8 and 64MB of cache RAM, and make no particular guarantees about not just dropping its contents on the floor when the power goes
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A few do, most do not. Some that do, only protect the metadata and cannot support flushing RAM cache to flash on power fail.
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One of the features of the Samsung 850s is they can dynamically change MLC into SLC and maintains 3GB of SLC for quick writes. One of their claims is that this allows the dram to be qui
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so shoving enough supercaps into the enclosure
Please don't use words like supercaps or cost or bulk. High-end SSDs with full power protection have an array of tantalum capacitors to ensure the entire cache can be written out in event of a power failure. This goes above and beyond what ever other external drive on the market has including all spinning drives which all lose their cache when suddenly unplugged saving only enough power to park the head.
A few early SSDs suffered from catastrophic dataloss when suddenly unplugged due to the omission of a ver
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There are some reviews of SSDs on the Net about what drives can stand the most in the way of being depowered while writes are in flight. The one thing about the review is that the Intel enterprise SSDs did not lose data or go into an unusable state. This was a few years ago, so I'm hoping that other drive makers have caught up, so a dirty power-off won't mean the entire SSD is destroyed... because recovering an SSD is orders of magnitudes harder than looking at the stored magnetic domains on a HDD.
The thi
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SSDs aren't usually able to handle power faults like regular HDs.
No, one or two poorly designed SSDs were unable to cope with power faults. The vast majority of SSDs on the market have absolutely no problem with a sudden loss of power.
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450 MB/sec over USB 3.0 is likely untrue (Score:1)
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They measure the transfer rate of a single file in 1 direction.
USB 3 gets you 5 Gbps. 500 MBps after overhead. 450 is definitely achievable in real-world use with a decent USB controller.
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That is indicative of your system not being able to push the data rate, not the spec. many chipsets and even supposedly USB 3.0 drives are shit and don't come close to being able to pump out anything close to what USB 3.0 is capable of, but then 99% of people have no need to even come close to maxing out USB 3.0.
Speed OK. What About Reliability? (Score:2)
The HotHardware evaluation focused entirely on speed. What about reliability? Early SSDs were plagued with a limited number of writes, after which no further writes were possible. While recent SSDs seemed to have improved, evaluations should still address reliability.
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And if you, logically, don't trust the manufacturer's tests there are some others who have pushed over a terabyte to SSDs:
SSD endurance experiment [techreport.com]
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Every SSD has a limited number of writes. That hasn't changed. Wear leveling algorithms ensures that normal users will never be faced with that issue under normal use, though. In other words, unless you have some very specialized scenario where you're writing massive amounts of data continuously [extremetech.com], it's really not an issue. Keep in mind that also, even if you happened to hit the write limit twenty years from now, all your data should still be readable.
Reliability is a bit harder of a metric to cover, beca
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What Is... (Score:2)
...a non-portable SSD?
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People are looking at the wrong specs (Score:2, Interesting)
The tl;dr version if you want to skip everything below is that because MB/s is the inverse, the bigger the MB/s gets, the less difference it makes. Let me repeat because it's so counter-intuitive: The bigger th
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Max Sequential Read Up to 540MB/s
Max Sequential Write Up to 520MB/s
4KB Random Read
Random read (QD1) [IOPS]: up to 10,000 IOPS
Random read (QD32) [IOPS]: up to 197,000 IOPS
4KB Random Write
Random Write (QD1) [IOPS]: up to 40,000 IOPS
Random Write (QD32) [IOPS]: up to 88,000 IOPS
I assume what you're talking about is the QD1 4k random read that is important. Yes, they have that information front and center. 10,000 4k blocks every second is about 40MB/s. Abo
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Note the words "up to". That does not mean "typical" or "guaranteed".
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Try measuring your trip times. For a 20 mile trip:
20 mph = 60 min
40 mph = 30 min (30 min saved)
60 mph = 20 min (10 min saved)
80 mph = 15 min (5 min saved)
100 mph = 12 min (3 min saved)
That's why all your drivers ed classes advised you not to speed. It's not just about being safer and saving fuel. It's a terrible tradeoff in terms of time saved for risk incurred.
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Very much depends who "you" are, how many you tested, what you tested and whether you have any interest in seeing Samsung fail or not.
Sorry, but an AC post against Samsung - hell, even 100, or 100 1-star posts on Amazon (which often consist of "it didn't arrive", "I broke it and don't know how to fix it" or "this was shit and didn't work as cat litter at all", can't compete against the sheer number of 5-star reviews I see of some of their SSD products (not all, granted, but some) - including those of actual
Memory stick (Score:2)
Portable SSD
You mean, a memory stick?
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