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Data Storage

Samsung Releases First 2TB Consumer SSD For Laptops 195

Lucas123 writes: Samsung has released what it is calling the world's first 2.5-in consumer-grade, multi-terabyte SSD, and it's issuing the new drive a 10-year warranty. With up to 2TB of capacity, the new 850 Pro and 850 EVO SSDs double the maximum capacity of their predecessors. As with the previous 840 Pro and EVO models, Samsung used its 3D V-NAND technology, which stacks 32 layers of NAND atop one another in a microscopic skyscraper. Additionally, the drives take advantage of multi-level cell (MLC) and triple-level cell (TLC) (2- and 3-bit per cell) technology for even greater density. The 850 Pro, Samsung said, can manage up to 550MBps sequential read and 520MBps sequential write rates and up to 100,000 random I/Os per second (IOPS). The 850 EVO SSD has slightly lower performance with 540MBps and 520MBps sequential read/write rates and up to 90,000 random IOPS. The SSDs will range in capacity from 120GB to 2TB and in price from $99 to $999.
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Samsung Releases First 2TB Consumer SSD For Laptops

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  • Step 1 (Score:4, Insightful)

    by JMJimmy ( 2036122 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @12:44PM (#50070077)

    Finally we have a reasonably sized SSD... now it's just got to come down in price 80-90%

    • Finally we have a reasonably sized SSD... now it's just got to come down in price 80-90%

      Reasonably sized? It's 5 times the size of all data on my system.

      • Clearly you're not a gamer. 60 GB installs are the norm these days.
        • Re:Step 1 (Score:4, Insightful)

          by tompaulco ( 629533 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @01:09PM (#50070347) Homepage Journal

          Clearly you're not a gamer. 60 GB installs are the norm these days.

          How does that work? Multiple Blurays?

          • Almost everyone does digital anymore. For some stupid reason though, the PC gaming industry refuses to adopt Blu-ray, so they just ship games like GTA V on a truckload of DVDs. I have a 50 Mbps connection, so downloading 50+ GB doesn't take long.
            • Consumer PC Blu-Ray isn't worth the money. I can get 32GB memory stix for less than the cost of Blu-Ray blank disks. Some makers put combo drives in but those only burn DVDs, blu-Ray writers are like the Zip drive when CD-ROM came out.

            • by mjwx ( 966435 )

              Almost everyone does digital anymore. For some stupid reason though, the PC gaming industry refuses to adopt Blu-ray, so they just ship games like GTA V on a truckload of DVDs.

              GTA V had 7 DVD's.

              As for Blurry, its going the way of LaserDisc. Digital distribution is taking over and Bluray doesn't offer any advantages over DVD. In fact it has a few disadvantages, the fact the drives and media are too expensive compared to DVD. For people that need Shit-ton of portable storage. A 64GB SD card or USB thumb drive is cheaper and reusable. When games become too big for DVD, they'll be shipped on flash media instead.

              The use of optical media is declining, but I'm still going to bet D

          • Re:Step 1 (Score:5, Informative)

            by mjwx ( 966435 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @08:46PM (#50073047)

            Clearly you're not a gamer. 60 GB installs are the norm these days.

            How does that work? Multiple Blurays?

            No one sells games on Blurry. Chances are they never will, the drives are just not popular and digital download is slowly taking over as a means of game distribution.

            I bought GTA V in physical form. It came on 7 DVD's and I still had to download another 5 odd GB.

            60 GB installs are only the norm for "tripple A" dross because they're too lazy to use compression on audio and textures. I've bought a lot of non-AAA games during the recent Steam sale, the largest was Cities Skyline at 2.9 GB.

        • Re:Step 1 (Score:4, Insightful)

          by macs4all ( 973270 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @01:15PM (#50070391)

          Clearly you're not a gamer. 60 GB installs are the norm these days.

          Or video editor. Unless you are fastidious about getting rid of stuff, you can stack up some serious GB on each project.

          • Re:Step 1 (Score:4, Informative)

            by mjwx ( 966435 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @09:01PM (#50073109)

            Clearly you're not a gamer. 60 GB installs are the norm these days.

            Or video editor. Unless you are fastidious about getting rid of stuff, you can stack up some serious GB on each project.

            Not a video editor, but I've been a sysadmin for GIS companies, they deal with a shitload of high res imagery as well as databases. GIS analysts have to be fastidious about using fast storage and slow storage. We've been able to provide them with a lot of slow storage for ages now but fast storage is still expensive even with consumer grade SSD's. They still have to set up their work to read from slow storage and write to fast storage, after processing is complete they move the finished product to the slow disk. I set up a modern GIS workstation with 2 SSD's and at least 1 big spinning disk. I use one small SSD for the OS and applications and a second larger SSD just for processing.

            If the company is rich enough to give them fibre channel connections to a SAN it gets a lot more expensive (the extra processing speed on server HW can be worth it though).

        • "My Documents"/prog/nethack on my laptop is about 7MB, including a bunch of bones files and a saved game or two...

          But yes, bigger hard drives can be useful. My last laptop refresh at work went from a 300GB rotating hard disk to a 256GB SSD, and I had to move my music and Linux ISOs to an external drive. (Eventually I added a 128GB SDXC card, but the news keeps saying that the latest iTunes has serious bugs, so I haven't reinstalled it yet.)

          • Why keep ISOs at all. They are static and available via download and Torrent. Music? Just get Pandora or whatever, and stop worrying about what you have where it is and what format it might be in.

            I don't own music, the artist does. I just listen.

            • Why keep ISOs at all. They are static and available via download and Torrent.

              Clearly you have a badassed internet connection. Mine is the opposite. It maxes out at 6Mbps. It's the best thing I can get where I live for $62/mo. I'd have to get a fractional T3 in order to get more bandwidth here, or a private point to point microwave link perhaps. I save ISOs for a rainy day. Literally.

              • By the time I need to reuse a Linux ISO, there is a newer version out there and I have to download it again anyways. It has little to nothing to do with bandwidth. My view is different because waiting two hours for an ISO to download isn't that big of a deal.

          • This tempts me to raise the side question about whether games today are more fun. I don't mean slicker, with infinitely better graphics and so on. I mean more FUN. What makes a 50GB game more fun than an old 200kB game?

            I'm not trying to be silly. In pre-computer days, we had fun with card and board games. In the 80s, we had great fun with those "new" computer games. Things progressed. Today, we can play incredible 50GB games, but does size and slickness and super graphics translate to more fun, or is there

        • Honestly, you could have had 2TB of 850 EVO storage from Amazon for $700... cheaper than this single drive's MSRP by $100. Of course, you'd have to split up installs across drives then.
      • "Finally we have a reasonably sized SSD... now it's just got to come down in price 80-90%

        'Reasonably sized? It's 5 times the size of all data on my system.'

        Wot? You don't have an Oracle Server running on your laptop?

        • Wot? You don't have an Oracle Server running on your laptop?

          No, but I have IIS, Tomcat and SQL Server. I think the bitcoin blockchain takes up more space than anything other individual thing on my system.

        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          Oracle express limits you to 10G.

          Although you can always snag the enterprise version and go crazy with that on your own system if you really want.

      • Finally we have a reasonably sized SSD... now it's just got to come down in price 80-90%

        Reasonably sized? It's 5 times the size of all data on my system.

        Wow... I delete the equivalent of your system every month due to lack of space. Currently our household has 8TB of HDDs (not including the 4TB of dvd storage) every one of them is near capacity and we're not backing up nearly as much as we should. We could easily fill 30-40TB if we had everything we wanted installed/properly backed up.

      • LMOL 5x your data? Lightweight....
  • Are these relevant? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @12:46PM (#50070107) Journal

    I suppose there are a few 5 pound laptops out there for power users that still use the 2.5" form factor, but they're disappearing rapidly. Things are moving fast in the SSD storage area and many are moving to the M.2 format. Though I suppose any increase in density is good as it means higher cap small format drives and cheaper options*.

    *so that Microsoft and Apple can increase their profit margins on storage. The great thing about impossible to open PCs is that they can charge whatever the fuck they want for storage no matter how cheap it gets.

    • They've already announced the newer form factors for m.pcie m2 sdds which will leverage this. I can't wait till we get above 256GB for this. As for the 2.5" form factor, cracking open any SSDs now shows a lot of empty space, so this lastest announcement is evolutionary, not revolutionary. aka Tock

    • by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @01:05PM (#50070303)

      M.2 is a mess. Same connector type for two, even three* different protocols is always dumb. This, combined with poor mobo documentation, confuses people.
      I got shafted yesterday, bought an M.2 SATA EVO 850, 512 GB for my PC and when I got home the PC wouldn't recognize it. After lots of digging around, I came to realize my mobo only had support for PCI Express M.2 SSDs, not SATA ones. No, the user manual was NOT straightforward, nor did it provide any hints on compatibility (or lack of it). So I gave it back and upgraded to a 2.5" 1TB EVO 850. At least I can't be surprised (in a bad way).

      *three because there's PCI Express 2.0 support and PCI Express 3.0 support as well.

      • My wife's Lenovo laptop power connection fried recently, and we got to discover the joys of different SSD formats. The first generation X1 Carbon had a Sandisk 20+6 format, and I think the second was M.2 and the third some mSATA format, but I may have the latter two backwards. After looking around online for a while, I found a $25 adapter board from China that lets you plug in the 20+6 drive so you can read it on a "standard" SATA connector, so we were able to back up the data before sending it in for (Ya

        • I'm waiting for the patent on Apple's original iPod connector to expire so I can get a portable media player compatible with it.. or by then, everyone will have forgotten about it.
          Don't get your hopes up.. I don't even know of a single media player compatible with the iPod connector.

    • I suppose there are a few 5 pound laptops out there for power users that still use the 2.5" form factor, but they're disappearing rapidly. Things are moving fast in the SSD storage area and many are moving to the M.2 format. Though I suppose any increase in density is good as it means higher cap small format drives and cheaper options*.

      *so that Microsoft and Apple can increase their profit margins on storage. The great thing about impossible to open PCs is that they can charge whatever the fuck they want for storage no matter how cheap it gets.

      If you are referring to Apple (especially Apple laptops) with your "impossible to open" comment, that hasn't been true for quite some time now. Remove the 10 Phillips-head screws holding the bottom "pan" on, and the battery, RAM (on replaceable-RAM models) and Drive(s) are readily-accessible and replaceable, even on the newer models with the PCI(?) SSDs. Even the Trackpad is easily replaced.

      Ironically enough, when Apple went to the Unibody design for laptops, the only thing that became an absolute BEAR to

      • by amorsen ( 7485 )

        Even the Trackpad is easily replaced.

        I give you the instructions [ifixit.com] for replacing the trackpad on my Macbook. It is an easy 44 steps. Well, 87, since you have to do it all in reverse to put it back together.

        Also, it's $450 just for the parts and tools. More if you don't like to buy refurbished.

        • Even the Trackpad is easily replaced.

          I give you the instructions [ifixit.com] for replacing the trackpad on my Macbook. It is an easy 44 steps. Well, 87, since you have to do it all in reverse to put it back together.

          Also, it's $450 just for the parts and tools. More if you don't like to buy refurbished.

          Funny, the TrackPad I replaced in a friend's 2009 13 inch MacBook Pro was like 4 steps, if. Remove screws from bottom pan. Remove battery connector. Remove battery. Remove 4 screws holding Trackpad. Done.

          Well, I see that it IS a bit more involved for that model (you did pull the wrong guide though. Here's the right one [ifixit.com]). But the tools needed are more like $20, and the TrackPad can be had for around $60 [powerbookmedic.com] online. FAR less than the $450 that you quoted (without citation).

          • by amorsen ( 7485 )

            Funny, the TrackPad I replaced in a friend's 2009 13 inch MacBook Pro was like 4 steps, if. Remove screws from bottom pan. Remove battery connector. Remove battery. Remove 4 screws holding Trackpad. Done.

            It all changed around 2012.

            My information came from the link I supplied: "The MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display Early 2013 packs the battery, keyboard, trackpad, and upper case into one assembly. If any of these components fail, the entire assembly must be replaced."

            Your guide is for the 13" model. I do not know whether it works for the 15" model, but I can assure you that I am not intending to find out.

            But yes, it can be done for one $80 in tools and materials at least on the 13" model, unfortunately in 47 (w

    • by King_TJ ( 85913 )

      Valid point, but there actually are still some very popular choices out there in Corporate/Enterprise class laptops which would still take a 2.5" form factor drive.

      For example, HP has the Elitebook 840G2 out now, and I believe it's a "new for 2015" version of the Elitebook 840G1, which is still being sold until existing inventories of it dwindle. Both of these laptops have the option of using a M.2 format SSD, but still provide a regular internal 2.5" drive bay too.

    • Of course they're relevant, maybe not for laptops so much though. I have a bunch of servers using 512GB 840 pros in our datacenters, and when we EOL those drives, these 2TB models should be at the same price we paid for the 512GB parts so we'll get to quadruple our storage for the cost of the EOL refresh. Nice.

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @12:46PM (#50070109)

    the good news is that fantastic advances in memory construction are coming to SSDs. the bad news is all SSDs and HDDs are relying on security by obscurity and at some point everyone's storage devices will be permanently infected with malware that gives away their personal information.

    • by billstewart ( 78916 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @02:13PM (#50070935) Journal

      Doesn't matter whether they use security-by-obscurity or real hardware-driven or OS-driven encryption. The malware's running on top of the OS, which already has access to all the data on the drive (unless you're doing something fancy with multiple user logins, each of whom has differently-encrypted home directories, but even then, the malware can attack whoever's logged in right now.)

      Drive encryption mainly helps you against stolen hardware, and not usually very much, because that would require an inconvenient user interface.

  • The price-per-gig on the EVO model comes out to around $0.40/GB, which is where SSD prices have more or less been stalled for a few years now. So that's not so great. We really ought to be seeing some price reductions from 3D NAND.

    On the other hand, $800 is roughly what I paid for my first SSD, an 80GB Intel G1. Today, for the same price, you can get 2000GB.

    • by jratcliffe ( 208809 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @01:16PM (#50070399)

      "The price-per-gig on the EVO model comes out to around $0.40/GB, which is where SSD prices have more or less been stalled for a few years now."

      Really? A few years?

      The 850 EVO 500GB is currently $162 at Amazon (0.32/GB). In December, it was $252 (0.50/GB).

      That's a nearly 40% decline in six months.

      I'm getting 500GB SSDs today for what I was paying for 250GB drives a bit over a year ago.

      • by Guspaz ( 556486 )

        I may have made the mistake of comparing prices today using CAD and historically in USD, and only comparing at the ~1TB level, where price per gig seems to be a bunch higher.

    • A few years? Consumer SSDs only broke the $1/gb barrier about 2 years ago, then dropped down below $0.50 about a year ago.

      There are even some down around $0.30/GB if you shop around and aren't picky about brand name.

      My price point is no longer about $/GB, but "how much space can I get for $100" if it's an office / light duty machine or "how much for $400" if it's a power-user / gaming machine.

      So, please call me these new 2TB drives drop below $400. Which will probably be around this time next year,
  • by mcrbids ( 148650 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @12:55PM (#50070203) Journal

    We've been using Samsung drives in "non production" status servers, embedded servers, etc. and have had a terrible time of it. The first drives we bought a few years ago (840 Pro) were good, but we've seen Samsung SSDs run entirely through their write capacity (as reported by SMART) and then go dead when not even mounted! Turns out we aren't the only ones to get bit by buggy Samsung drives. [techreport.com]

    It also turns out that Samsung drives are even blacklisted in the Linux Kernel [algolia.com]

    I welcome Samsung's excellent cost/size value proposition! I just wish their drives were solid enough for our actual use.

    • I welcome Samsung's excellent cost/size value proposition! I just wish their drives were solid enough for our actual use.

      Then how is Apple having such good luck with them? Granted, Macs aren't generally used as high-transaction-count Servers; but people who do media creation/editing can sure churn through some R/W cycles in a hurry.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @04:00PM (#50071681)

        Then how is Apple having such good luck with them? Granted, Macs aren't generally used as high-transaction-count Servers; but people who do media creation/editing can sure churn through some R/W cycles in a hurry.

        First off, the problem is Linux is somehow triggering a bug in the TRIM implementation on Samsung SSDs.

        We know Windows doesn't do it, as Windows users are probably the biggest consumer of Samsung SSDs and there isn't a mass loss of data problem from Windows users. (And from querying Windows 7 via the command line, Windows does use TRIM).

        OS X may be using TRIM or not (depends on whether you're talking Apple-approved SSDs which are OEM versions, or third party user installed SSDs replacing the hard drive that was shipped). It's possible OS X may use TRIM in a way that it doesn't trigger the bug. Or maybe it does it less aggressively than Linux, so the bug incidence is far lower and no one noticed it yet.

        All we know is that Linux definitely triggers the TRIM bug, OS X and Windows doesn't, yet (but there are no guarantees that Apple or Microsoft won't change the way Windows 10 or El Capitan does TRIM which WILL expose the bug).

        The bug is in TRIM. That's all, if you don't use TRIM, it'll be fine. Maybe even using fstrim periodically is OK over using discard mode.

    • Why in God's name are you using SSDs in a server (production or not) without using hardware RAID? And none of that fakey-RAID that Linux sees right through either, I might add. From what I can see it's a problem between Linux trying to manage TRIM and the drive getting confused. Cut out the middleman, RAID them and underprovision a bit to give the drives more life, and then let Linux only see the storage presented by the RAID card and let the card itself handle communication with the drives.

      • by Trogre ( 513942 )

        While I agree with you for the most part, why do you say Hardware RAID instead of Software?

        The historical reasons for not using Software RAID (via mdadm) have long been resolved:

        • No scope for hot-swapping disks (resolved by AHCI eight years ago)
        • Slow (resolved about ten years ago when multi-core CPUs effectively eliminated CPU overhead in Software RAID)

        What, then, is the advantage of spending hundreds (or thousands) on a RAID card and introducing another point of failure?

    • by mlts ( 1038732 )

      Maybe it is just me, but if I have to spec a SSD by brand, it will be Intel. $2200 gets me a 1.7 TB Intel enterprise tier SSD (DC S3710.) It isn't cheap by any means... but you get what you pay for, and Intel has a very good reputation for reliability.

  • by sribe ( 304414 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @12:57PM (#50070221)

    It's the first time that max SSD capacity is greater than HD in a given size.

    Yes, I know there's a 2.5" 2TB HDD out there. But it's a 12mm height, and so cannot be used in any laptop that I know of, including my older thicker MacBook, which takes a 9.5mm height drive.

    This Samsung is a 7mm height, and thus will fit in any laptop that takes a 2.5" drive of any kind.

    • by adolf ( 21054 ) <flodadolf@gmail.com> on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @01:29PM (#50070513) Journal

      You must have forgotten about Samsung's own 2.5" 9.5mm 2tb HDD [amzn.to], which works in every laptop that I know of.

      • Many laptops these days can only fit 7mm high drives. This has been the case for years now... even my Thinkpad X220 only has a 7mm slot (you can get a 9.5mm high drive in there, but it's a squeeze and you need to remove the keyboard and palmrest assembly IIRC).

      • by sribe ( 304414 )

        You must have forgotten about Samsung's own 2.5" 9.5mm 2tb HDD [amzn.to], which works in every laptop that I know of.

        How the hell did I miss that??? I'm constantly watching for bigger drives for my laptop, because I actually need 2TB these days, and the only one I'd seen previously was 12mm.

        There are a lot of laptops these days that only take a 7mm, but not mine, so I'm happy now.

  • The 850 Pro, Samsung said, can manage up to 550MBps sequential read and 520MBps sequential write rates and up to 100,000 random I/Os per second (IOPS).

    There's nothing special in bothering to even mention the speeds of current consumer drives. They all saturate the SATA 6Gb/s bus, and that's that.

    • They all saturate the SATA 6Gb/s bus, and that's that.

      I really doubt that is true for truly random access like you would get in a multiuser database

  • Good Summary (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Art3x ( 973401 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @01:46PM (#50070697)

    This summary is well written. It is:

    • Complete: It covers all of the main facts. There was no big question left in my mind after reading it. It's so complete that many will not go on to the article itself. (Not that they would anyway. This is Slashdot.) But that's what headlines and leads are supposed to do. They are supposed to tell the whole story, from beginning to end --- just not with every last detail. If you want all the last details, you read the rest of the article.
    • Approachable: It defines all but the most common acroynms. For one it even goes further than just spelling out the acronym and also gives a nice little picture: ". . . 3D V-NAND technology, which stacks 32 layers of NAND atop one another in a microscopic skyscraper."
    • Well-built: The English is good. Although technical, it uses plain English where it can instead of buzzwords. The sentences are not too long or tangled with several interdependent clauses. They have a good rhythm. You hear the words in your head even when reading silently, so sonic things still matter, like rhythm, alliteration, and rhyme (That doesn't mean you should rhyme all the time).

    As a former professional technical writer, I am always on the look-out for good explanatory writing. I wanted to call it out here, especially since often we just complain when the summary's bad. When something's good, we're often silent. I suppose that's partly because when things are working, like the utility company, they don't attract attention and we just take them for granted. But writing like this is no accident.

  • TLC is a kind of MLC. "Multi" means "more than one". Multi does not mean "two and just two".

    • Also, the way I understand the term TLC, it would mean three voltage levels. So it can store log2(3) or about 1.58 bits per cell. Of course, "triple level" could mean it has 3x the old number of levels. Since you need 8 levels to store 3 bits, then I guess the old kind had 8/3 or a bit over 2 levels.
  • I am surprised it has taken this long to get to 2TB. Perhaps the price on 1TB will drop a little now, as they are no longer considered a premium drive.

    [Personally, I have 750GB of data. When replacing drives, I've always bought twice as much storage as I have had data.
    Once you do anything with video, space goes quick, I also have lots of photos, graphic projects, CAD and design projects.]

  • ...using these con/pro-sumer drives and not high-dollar SLC enterprise drives?

    I've been long tempted to and more so with the generally positive results from the SSD write-them-to-death-athon that wrote to SSDs until they expired.

    I know it's "not advised", risky, etc, but I'm thinking that maybe the drives are more reliable than we think and between backups and maybe a double parity RAID scheme or hot spare the risk is dialed down, or at least worth taking on a what-if basis.

    For my own home/lab VMware cluste

    • by mlts ( 1038732 )

      Because of the way virtualization has so much random I/O, going with a SSD will mean a night/day performance increase, just because each OS isn't fighting for a share of the drive head to read/write its own data.

      Running virtual machines on a SSD versus a spinning platter, you definitely will notice a performance improvement.

      • by swb ( 14022 )

        I don't doubt the performance would be stellar, but even with the encouraging news from the write endurance tests and stuff like Samsung's 10 year warranty on their Pro series drives I still am just nervous enough about long-term durability and some rubber-hits-the-road compatibility with systems like FreeNAS/Nas4Free that it makes me just a smidgen nervous about dumping $2500 into a new NAS setup.

        My own personal usage patterns are probably low enough that durability really wouldn't be a major issue, althou

  • by danlip ( 737336 ) on Wednesday July 08, 2015 @04:57PM (#50072037)

    From TFA: "Samsung guarantees the 2TB 850 Pro for 10 years or 300 terabytes written (TBW), and the 2TB 850 EVO for five years or 150 TBW."

    So the warranty is limited to 150 write cycles regardless of age for the Pro, and 75 for the EVO. That doesn't sound good to me.

    • The idea of a 10 year warranty makes me more nervous than a normal 1-3 year warranty. There must be a reason they need to make that kind of offer. When I bought my last car, I could have bought a mid-range Hyundai with a 10 year warranty but I bought a Toyota, barely glancing at the warranty terms. Why? Because it's a Toyota. It'll run forever with regular maintenance. It's about to roll over 100,000 with nothing but regular maintenance.

      • The idea of a 10 year warranty makes me more nervous than a normal 1-3 year warranty. There must be a reason they need to make that kind of offer.

        You are nervous due to a general mistrust for corporations and thus don't understand the simple reason. Wildly extended warranties are typically a show of faith to customers that a company is willing to stand by the claims that are covered by a warranty: namely that a SSD won't just magically lose data and die due to time, but rather only due to wear out.

        You car example is quite telling too. Hyundai were a horrendous brand tarnished by a reputation it deservedly received in the early 2000s over it's absolut

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