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Hardware

Samsung's 960 Pro and 960 Evo SSDs Marry Crazy-Fast Speeds With Roomy Capacity (pcworld.com) 38

An anonymous reader writes: Samsung is following up its NVMe successes from 2015 with some fresh blazing-fast M.2 SSDs for storage geeks. The company just announced the Samsung 960 Pro and 960 Evo during this year's Samsung SSD Global Summit. As with 2015's 950 Pro NVMe SSDs, the new 960 series marries stacked V-NAND density with the Non-Volatile Memory express (NVMe) specification. They also use a 4-lane PCIe 3.0 interface, just like the 950 Pro. The 960 Evo and Pro will roll out in October with prices starting at $130 and $330, respectively. The 960 Evo will be available in 250GB, 500GB, and 1TB capacities, while the Pro offers 512GB, 1TB, and 2TB versions. The Evo utilizes cheaper and more tightly packed TLC (triple-level cell) NAND, while the Pro sports speedier MLC (multi-level cell) NAND. That 2TB maximum is double the top capacity Samsung offered with the 950 Pro in 2015, and in another age would've earned the moniker "jaw dropping" for packing that much storage into an M.2 SSD. But this is the age of the 1TB SDXC card, so maybe sheer capacity increases aren't as impressive as they used to be. Seagate also announced a 2TB M.2 storage option for enterprises in July.BetaNews has more details.
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Samsung's 960 Pro and 960 Evo SSDs Marry Crazy-Fast Speeds With Roomy Capacity

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 21, 2016 @01:01PM (#52932121)

    Samsung products tend to explode.

  • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2016 @01:03PM (#52932135) Journal

    "Capacity of Samsung's New 960 Pro and 960 Evo SSDs are bursting at the seams, With Blazing-Fast Speeds"

    (calm down...I own a Note 7)

  • TFS: All that without saying how fast they are. lol

    • by Anonymous Coward

      RTFA:

      "The 960 Pro offers a nice bump in sequential read/write speeds compared to the 950 Pro. The 960 Pro will have a read speed of 3.5GB/s and a sequential write speed of 2.1GB/s. The 950 Pro, by comparison, topped out its read speed at 2.5GB/s and a write speed of 1.5GB/s.

      Samsung's promising a sequential read speed of 3.2GB/s and a write speed of 1.9GB/s for the 960 Evo. The 960 Evo will also be the first SSD to come with Samsung Intelligent TurboWrite technology, which the company says helps accelerate s

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        Those numbers are well over-inflated and are only true for filling the DDR RAM cache. Once you have 'filled' the drive and caches, the 950Pro has a write speed of ~200MB/s (4k streaming) - 1GB/s (128k streaming) and ~2000 random IOPS.

      • RTFA? RTFA???

        This is... this is slashdot... WTF are you thinking?

        o Read TFS
        o Bitch about editors and / or submitters
        o PROFIT!

  • Slashvertisement (Score:4, Insightful)

    by courteaudotbiz ( 1191083 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2016 @01:14PM (#52932227) Homepage
    Slashvertisement. Period.
    • by PRMan ( 959735 )
      If you are making the fastest, largest SSD on Earth, I want to hear about it.
  • by BenBoy ( 615230 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2016 @01:26PM (#52932297)
    Wow, that's a lot of marketing-speak for a technical analysis. Funny my ad-blocker missed this one ...
  • Is there a bios version i need to look for to be able to boot this?

    >>4-lane PCIe 3.0 interface,
    how old of MB would support this?
    • Look at the specs for your system and/or motherboard, in particular the chipset it is using. Look for anything mentioning "M.2". My Z170 chipset mentions "M.2 x4" and "both SATA & PCIE mode" so I should be ready.
    • You'll need very recent hardware at a minimum.

      Generally speaking, booting from it will probably require at least a 9-series (i.e. Z97) board and running it at full speed will probably require a 10-series (i.e. Z170) board.

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2016 @01:35PM (#52932387)

    Intel needs more pci-e lanes or amd will kill them with zen.

    Intel top end Kaby Lake cpus only have 16+4(DMI) 3.0 lanes off of the cpu and the chip set has 20-24 3.0 + LAN + USB + SATA stacked off of the X4 DMI link.

    http://www.amd.com/en-us/innov... [amd.com]

    The initial “Zen” cores for “Summit Ridge”-powered desktops will utilize the AMD AM4 socket, a new unified socket infrastructure that is compatible with 7th Generation AMD A-Series desktop processors. With dedicated PCIe® lanes for cutting-edge USB, graphics, data and other I/O, the AMD AM4 platform will not steal lanes from other devices and components. This allows users to enjoy systems with improved responsiveness and the future looking technologies that the AM4 platform provides, resulting in a powerful, scalable and reliable computing solution for all their needs.

    • It's a bit trumped up (well, as in old card games we still play), as they run the same 16+4 set up as far as I know. But there is way more I/O built into the CPU itself. Some of it is four SATA or two SATA plus two PCIe lanes for an SSD. Some of it is USB, but additional USB or SATA or PCIe SSD on the chipset will "steal" bandwith still.

  • I just sat through a session talking about Intel's SSD line.

    There are a few technology differences that Intel is branding in their SSDs vs other vendors. But one of the main takeaways I took from their presentation is reliability.

    Intel has invested a lot of lab time into making sure their products are very stable. One of the most striking things they discussed is on a few competitor's SSDs they physically pulled the capacitors that perform some of their write buffers and the health check didn't even detect

    • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

      "Intel has invested a lot of lab time into making sure their products are very stable."

      Correction:

      "Intel has invested a lot of time telling everyone that their products are very stable."

  • "The 960 Pro offers a nice bump in sequential read/write speeds compared to the 950 Pro. The 960 Pro will have a read speed of 3.5GB/s and a sequential write speed of 2.1GB/s. The 950 Pro, by comparison, topped out its read speed at 2.5GB/s and a write speed of 1.5GB/s.

    Samsung's promising a sequential read speed of 3.2GB/s and a write speed of 1.9GB/s for the 960 Evo. The 960 Evo will also be the first SSD to come with Samsung Intelligent TurboWrite technology, which the company says helps accelerate sequen

  • wow liked this story with reliable prizes

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