One way to think of it is that every storage device is guaranteed to fail eventually - it just may take a Very long time. Or it may happen very soon. Ultimately it's risk/convenience/cost as far as backups and just how much of how often is backed up. I got a 10TB WD USB3 drive to do some backup. Ran through once to do full backup from all my drives. Few months later I figure time to update, plug it in to do new copies, and it just clicks at me... still under warranty, but just shows that you never really know when things fail.
All companies make bad products. Even Samsung had a big issue with 850 EVO series SSDs at one point.
You should ideally just be trusting of validated SKUs or product series due to trusted positive reviews, not an entire company's portfolio just on brand recognition alone.
I had x3 840 drives: 750GB [rather expensive SSD back then] and two 120GB The 840 was Never fixed, the firmware update helped temporally but never solved the problem. Eventually Samsung added a NAND refresh option to Samsung Magician [it only visible to 840 models] and had two options, either run it automatically every X days or manually. It had to read and then write every file to make the SSD fast. The issue was that the older the files that never moved got low read speed, the older the file the slower the read, so the program refreshed it. The firmware update did the same, one time after update, but after some months people started to complain that the problem came back, so Samsung found out that this file refresh has to be applied all the time and came out with software solution. This bug made the 840EVO worthless for people that knew about it, mostly didnt and still dont.
In the early days of SSDs, I bought an OCZ Vertex 2, which I got burnt on (and received an replacement for). After that, I went for Intel.. until they decided to stop making their own controllers. Then it's been 100% Samsung all the way, Pro drives for data that matters.
Pci 4 increases bandwide, so mainly the performance is on moving big amounth of data. The signaali Are Also better so there may be Little improvement in other segment, but those will be very minor!
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azfacea - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
this might be unfair but for some reason, i can only trust samsung, WD, and maybe crucial with my data.RMSe17 - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
One way to think of it is that every storage device is guaranteed to fail eventually - it just may take a Very long time. Or it may happen very soon. Ultimately it's risk/convenience/cost as far as backups and just how much of how often is backed up. I got a 10TB WD USB3 drive to do some backup. Ran through once to do full backup from all my drives. Few months later I figure time to update, plug it in to do new copies, and it just clicks at me... still under warranty, but just shows that you never really know when things fail.JoeyJoJo123 - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
All companies make bad products. Even Samsung had a big issue with 850 EVO series SSDs at one point.You should ideally just be trusting of validated SKUs or product series due to trusted positive reviews, not an entire company's portfolio just on brand recognition alone.
Vatharian - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
850 EVO? Oooops? Could you elaborate? It happens I have several dozens of 850s RAIDed currently.29a - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
I think he's talking about the 840.https://www.anandtech.com/show/9196/samsung-releas...
JoeyJoJo123 - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
Whoops yeah, typo and no edit feature.piroroadkill - Thursday, June 13, 2019 - link
It was the 840, and it was just that it got slower. They eventually released a firmware update.Mr.Vegas - Sunday, June 30, 2019 - link
I had x3 840 drives: 750GB [rather expensive SSD back then] and two 120GBThe 840 was Never fixed, the firmware update helped temporally but never solved the problem.
Eventually Samsung added a NAND refresh option to Samsung Magician [it only visible to 840 models] and had two options, either run it automatically every X days or manually.
It had to read and then write every file to make the SSD fast.
The issue was that the older the files that never moved got low read speed, the older the file the slower the read, so the program refreshed it.
The firmware update did the same, one time after update, but after some months people started to complain that the problem came back, so Samsung found out that this file refresh has to be applied all the time and came out with software solution.
This bug made the 840EVO worthless for people that knew about it, mostly didnt and still dont.
piroroadkill - Thursday, June 13, 2019 - link
In the early days of SSDs, I bought an OCZ Vertex 2, which I got burnt on (and received an replacement for). After that, I went for Intel.. until they decided to stop making their own controllers. Then it's been 100% Samsung all the way, Pro drives for data that matters.Metroid - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
Funny, no manufacturer listed priced them yet, are they afraid to say they want a leg and an arm for it? heheLiviuTM - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
At the end of the article - ”SSD of this side” - I think you mean ”SSD of this size”.ballsystemlord - Wednesday, June 12, 2019 - link
So, are 4K read speed going to increase, or just the sequential R/W speed?haukionkannel - Thursday, June 13, 2019 - link
Pci 4 increases bandwide, so mainly the performance is on moving big amounth of data. The signaali Are Also better so there may be Little improvement in other segment, but those will be very minor!