Micro Center via Amazon[amazon.com] has the Inland Platinum 1TB SSD NVMe PCIe Gen 3.0x4 M.2 2280 3D NAND Internal Solid State Drive $99.99. Shipping is free. Now $102.99
R/W up to 3,400/1,900 MB/s,
PCIe Express 3.1 and NVMe 1.3 Compatible
Support Windows: 8 & 10
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Micro Center via Amazon[amazon.com] has the Inland Platinum 1TB SSD NVMe PCIe Gen 3.0x4 M.2 2280 3D NAND Internal Solid State Drive $99.99. Shipping is free. Now $102.99
Model: Inland Platinum 1TB SSD M.2 2280 NVMe PCIe Gen 3.0x4 3D NAND Internal Solid State Drive, R/W up to 3400MB/s and 1900MB/s, PCIe Express 3.1 and NVMe 1.3 Compatible, Ultimate Gaming Solutions (1TB)
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ghoulish31
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from Durrrrr
:
Any real gamer will not pick this one. SN750/850 or Samsung series are much better even they are 20-50 bucks more. But gamer will not sacrifice the performance for the price difference
ā
Oh whoops, I didn't realize being a "real gamer" meant throwing money at unnecessary specs.
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Apr 14, 2021 01:39 AM
350 Posts
Joined Mar 2017
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Any real gamer will not pick this one. SN750/850 or Samsung series are much better even they are 20-50 bucks more. But gamer will not sacrifice the performance for the price difference
What is the tbw of this 1TB ssd? Is 100TBW Correct? Isn't that low?
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from elliottAM
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Yes, 100TBW is accurate, and yes, frighteningly low.
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from KevinT6824
:
Pretty good deal for a game/media drive, though.
it is quite low relatively speaking - their premium line is like 1,600TBW.
however, 100TBW is basically 10tb written per year for 10 years. using it as a game drive, i definitely don't install 10tb worth of games in a year (i wish i had the time to play that many games).
not many people will keep an ssd for 10 years (outdated specs in terms of capacity and speed, as well as potential failure of other parts of the ssd).
so depending on the use case, 100tbw is fine. if you're a professional that constantly transfers data, then i'd recommend a higher tier ssd (pcie gen 4).
also note that tbw isn't necessarily an indicator of reliability, as it's not a guaranteed spec and use-case varies by person. MTBF is probably a better measure, but i don't feel like researching MTBF between different drives right now.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ghoulish31
Oh whoops, I didn't realize being a "real gamer" meant throwing money at unnecessary specs.
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https://linustechtips.c
however, 100TBW is basically 10tb written per year for 10 years. using it as a game drive, i definitely don't install 10tb worth of games in a year (i wish i had the time to play that many games).
not many people will keep an ssd for 10 years (outdated specs in terms of capacity and speed, as well as potential failure of other parts of the ssd).
so depending on the use case, 100tbw is fine. if you're a professional that constantly transfers data, then i'd recommend a higher tier ssd (pcie gen 4).
also note that tbw isn't necessarily an indicator of reliability, as it's not a guaranteed spec and use-case varies by person. MTBF is probably a better measure, but i don't feel like researching MTBF between different drives right now.
I have 4 machines with nvme drives. I'm all set.
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