Because of the size I'm sure this must be a non-2.5" drive, meaning mSATA or M.2.
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
Because of the size I'm sure this must be a non-2.5" drive, meaning mSATA or M.2.
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
Because of the size I'm sure this must be a non-2.5" drive, meaning mSATA or M.2.
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
Interesting, it's a USB 3.0 drive, but it looks like you can take it apart and all that's inside is a 2.5" SATA->USB 3.0 adapter. If I had one in my area I'd be willing to give it a shot.
Because of the size I'm sure this must be a non-2.5" drive, meaning mSATA or M.2.
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
looks like its what is normally what is in the 2.5" sata version but without the frame on it.
Only 1 left in Detroit, 1 in Twin Cities/St Louis, 3 St Louis/Brentwood, 1 Long Island, 1 Central Ohio, 2 NE Ohio/Mayfield, 1 Cincinnati at time of this post. All other stores OOS.
Great price, but sold out in all Texas stores. Good deal for those that have it in stock. Don't forget to use the $5 off coupon. Can't post link, but Google $5 Microcenter Coupon and you will find it.
In my experience 240-256 GB SSDs are plenty sufficient size for most laptops, and they cost correspondingly. I'd jump on it if it were a half its size - half its price deal. I would gut it out and use as internal SATA.
13 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Aside from form factor some motherboards only take M.2 SATA or M.2 PCIe. So lots of ways this might not work as an internal SSD. What laptop or desktop are you planning to use it in?
In my experience 240-256 GB SSDs are plenty sufficient size for most laptops, and they cost correspondingly. I'd jump on it if it were a half its size - half its price deal. I would gut it out and use as internal SATA.