Traditional spinning hard drives have typically enjoyed two advantages over their solid-state brethren. They’re vastly cheaper in terms of their cost-per-GB, and they could hold far more information in a single enclosure. Both of these advantages have been steadily eroded over the past few years as SSD
costs have fallen and capacities have increased, but hard drives have still eked out a win in both categories (at least at price points that consumers are going to pay).
Bit by bit, however, SSD
s have closed the gap. Samsung’s new 4TB SSD
is a $1,500 solid state drive that aims to replace your HDD altogether, provided you’ve got four figures to drop on a storage medium in the first place. Samsung’s TLC-based 850 EVO
combines a 40nm process node with 48-layer vertical NAND (aka 3D NAND
). Anandtech had a chance to put the drive through a battery of tests and reports that it performs well, even if it doesn’t break any particular new ground beyond price.
With SSDBit by bit, however, SSD
SSD
Incidentally, it looks like 3-6TB
source: www.extremetech.com
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