- May 30, 2016
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When you see benchmarks for read and write speeds for drives the 4k is alwasy VERY slow speeds. Why?
When you see benchmarks for read and write speeds for drives the 4k is alwasy VERY slow speeds. Why?
So when choosing a drive for speed what is the most important to look at for benchmarks? Like some drives have very high sequential read and write but horrible 4k read and write vs a drive that is much lower sequential but has double the 4k speeds.
Doesn't ssd wear leveling practically guarantee that ~100% of the workload will be random?Normal-person office use is generally like 70/30 sequential/random use. But the random is what you'll find yourself waiting for the most. (The computer has very little idea what you're going to want/need to read off the drive next, and random I/O is harder.)
Go back to the thread you created on the subject, read it's entire contents, and find out the people who claimed NVMe drives are slow to boot could not substantiate those claims in the face of actual owners who told them otherwise.I was looking to the m.2 2280 nvME stuff and it looks so insanely fast. But i hear that its useless with those speeds and that it actually makes booting up windows MUCH slower. Should i steer clear of that tech for now and get a Samsung 850 EVO or Pro instead?
Random refers to data location within the file system, not location of flash cells within the chips themselves.Doesn't ssd wear leveling practically guarantee that ~100% of the workload will be random?
I was looking to the m.2 2280 nvME stuff and it looks so insanely fast. But i hear that its useless with those speeds and that it actually makes booting up windows MUCH slower. Should i steer clear of that tech for now and get a Samsung 850 EVO or Pro instead?
Go back to the thread you created on the subject, read it's entire contents, and find out the people who claimed NVMe drives are slow to boot could not substantiate those claims in the face of actual owners who told them otherwise.
My lowly TLC based NVMe drive cold boots Win 10 in 8.2 seconds. Is that fast enough for you?
Some of them do take a while to initialize when the BIOS is doing its pre-boot stuff. On the other hand, it makes everything else faster.
How often do you reboot your computer?
Whether I seem angry or not is not the point: read your own thread, people explain in it how their NVMe drives have no problem booting Windows at fast speeds.You seem angry. You should go for walk outside. It'll help.
Yeah, I don't notice a difference either. (My laptop has one of those fancy PCI-E SSDs. My desktop... doesn't.)The point is those speeds dont seem to make any difference in real world use from a regular fast SSD. Only in benchmarks. If it does I would like to buy one.
Yeah, I don't notice a difference either. (My laptop has one of those fancy PCI-E SSDs. My desktop... doesn't.)
It's up to you to know your workload well enough to know if the additional speed would actually matter.
If you have a laptop or a SFF PC with a dedicated "SSD Slot" (m.2 or whatever) then there's something to be said for using that slot, but if that's not an issue, yeah, I'd just buy whatever's cheaper.