Samsung 840is the best brand of SSD.
my Samsung 840Pro died on me unexpectedly
Sorry, Samsung isn't the 'best'... but it's one of the good ones that deserve consideration.
anecdotal doesn't refute the rest of the data. The 840 line is probably the best mix of speed and stability on the market.
I would also add SanDisk to blastingcap's list.
The SanDisk Ultra Plus is a great mid-range, mid-capacity SSD, while the Extreme II is a top-tier pro-quality SSD.
Sandisk is using Marvell for their mainstream SATA drives, now (Ultra Plus and Extreme II), and also rolling their own controllers. They jointly R&D and manufacture the flash itself with Toshiba. Like Toshiba, Intel, Samsung, and Micron, they also make enterprise SSDs.I already mentioned Sandisk and not exactly in a positive manner, due to issues like:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/6107/corsair-force-series-gs-240gb-review
I already mentioned Sandisk and not exactly in a positive manner, due to issues like:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/6107/corsair-force-series-gs-240gb-review
So I didn't include them in the Intel, Micron/Crucial, and Samsung triumvirate. Like Seagate, I'd like to see more of a track record of good products from Sandisk before I would recommend them highly. Reasonable minds can disagree, but since Sandisk SSDs don't sell at much if any discount to Intel/Crucial/Samsung, I see no reason to buy Sandisks.
Yes, I saw that you mentioned them in relation to SandForce issues, but as Cerb pointed out, your criticism is no longer directly relevant to mainstream SanDisk drives as they are not using SandForce controllers any longer. You might still offer it as being evidence of willingness to put out an inconsistent product, and I might agree, but the reviews of the more modern Ultra Plus and Extreme II speak for themselves.
Like you said, reasonable people can disagree, but the flip-side to the "not-enough discount" is the "not enough performance difference to justify the added cost".![]()
some interesting preliminary features like RAPID to their drives.
Instead of worrying about reliability (most SSDs are quite reliable for consumer needs), I would focus on a SSD that has a complete toolbox or software solution for managing the drives. If you want manual TRIM, you kind of need a SSD that has these software options.