expired Posted by Jaggsta • May 23, 2023
May 23, 2023 9:39 PM
Item 1 of 4
Item 1 of 4
expired Posted by Jaggsta • May 23, 2023
May 23, 2023 9:39 PM
2TB ADATA Premium M.2 2280 NVMe PCIe 4.0 Solid State Drive
+ Free Shipping$110
$150
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1. This is a general question about gaming drives. I assume that gaming drives are the same as any other NVME drive one might put into a laptop. Is there any reason not to run it in a laptop? Would it get too hot, for instance.
2. More important to me and my clients, is there any real advantage putting these very fast drives into laptop and desktop PCs not used for gaming? For years I've always gone with the fastest drives for my clients, especially when I change drives in existing older computers for older clients. But system stability is more important to my clients than raw speed. I just want to make sure that the newest drives are not only faster but have lower failure rates also. Are they both safer and faster or do manufacturers give up stability for speed?
3. Years back I'd only buy Samsung, Intel or Crucial SSDs because I trusted them. For your own computer would you choose this drive over a Samsung or another drive of the same type?
Thanks,
Al
So, I guess this will work for PS5? 😁
https://www.amazon.com/Mounting-Screws-Gigabyte-ASRock-Motherboards/dp/B08ZD81HDR/ref=sr_1_3?crid=17... [amazon.com]
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1. This is a general question about gaming drives. I assume that gaming drives are the same as any other NVME drive one might put into a laptop. Is there any reason not to run it in a laptop? Would it get too hot, for instance.
2. More important to me and my clients, is there any real advantage putting these very fast drives into laptop and desktop PCs not used for gaming? For years I've always gone with the fastest drives for my clients, especially when I change drives in existing older computers for older clients. But system stability is more important to my clients than raw speed. I just want to make sure that the newest drives are not only faster but have lower failure rates also. Are they both safer and faster or do manufacturers give up stability for speed?
3. Years back I'd only buy Samsung, Intel or Crucial SSDs because I trusted them. For your own computer would you choose this drive over a Samsung or another drive of the same type?
Thanks,
Al
https://www.amazon.com/ADATA-Prem...6TQND?th
https://m.media-amazon.com/images...iVs0FL
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1. This is a general question about gaming drives. I assume that gaming drives are the same as any other NVME drive one might put into a laptop. Is there any reason not to run it in a laptop? Would it get too hot, for instance.
2. More important to me and my clients, is there any real advantage putting these very fast drives into laptop and desktop PCs not used for gaming? For years I've always gone with the fastest drives for my clients, especially when I change drives in existing older computers for older clients. But system stability is more important to my clients than raw speed. I just want to make sure that the newest drives are not only faster but have lower failure rates also. Are they both safer and faster or do manufacturers give up stability for speed?
3. Years back I'd only buy Samsung, Intel or Crucial SSDs because I trusted them. For your own computer would you choose this drive over a Samsung or another drive of the same type?
Thanks,
Al