Wednesday, September 21st 2016

Samsung Announces the 960 Pro and 960 EVO Series M.2 NVMe SSDs

Samsung Electronics America, Inc., a worldwide leader in advanced memory solutions for more than two decades, today unveiled the Samsung 960 PRO and 960 EVO, its newest solid state drives (SSDs). The V-NAND based, M.2 form factor SSDs were built on the company's category-defining Non-Volatile Memory Express (NVMe) SSD leadership. With powerful performance, endurance and capacity topped with all new and more robust Samsung Magician software package, Samsung continues to accelerate the NVMe era.

Packed with more technology and innovation than ever, the 960 PRO and 960 EVO are designed for users who seek smaller and faster storage solutions that deliver higher bandwidth and lower latency for processing massive amounts of data for everything from gaming and large file transfers to 4K video rendering, data analytics and more on their ultra-thin notebooks and PCs.
Both the 960 PRO and 960 EVO use the Peripheral Component Interconnect Express (PCIe) Gen.3 x4 lane interface and are compliant with NVMe specifications to realize effective use of the high-speed PCIe bus and optimize both hardware and software configurations to take advantage of the NVMe SSD technology. The SSDs feature Samsung Dynamic Thermal Guard technology to manage performance during extreme workloads.

"For more than 30 years, Samsung has continued to push the boundaries of what is possible to deliver innovative consumer memory experiences," said Un-Soo Kim, Senior Vice President of Branded Product Marketing, Memory Business at Samsung Electronics. "Our V-NAND technology for NVMe-based storage products is our most recent advancement in the NVMe era."

The 960 PRO and 960 EVO SSDs redefine the personal computer performance, in part attributed to new controller which raises the bar of consumer SSD performance. The 960 PRO delivers peak sequential read and write transfer speeds of 3,500 MB/s and 2,100 MB/s, respectively, and random read and write IOPS of up to 440,000 and 360,000.

On top of being the world's fastest M.2 NVMe- SSD, the 960 PRO will also offer 2 terabyte (TB) capacity, which is the highest capacity commercially available for M.2 NVMe SSDs, along with 512GB and 1TB versions.2 The 960 PRO's high density was made possible by Samsung V-NAND technology and the uniquely restructured package design. As user capacity demand trends continue to rise, the high-density 960 PRO capacities are poised to conveniently meet the needs of personal data and information storage. The 960 PRO promises additional reliability and endurance with the five-year limited warranty and up to 1.2 petabytes written (PBW), whichever occurs first, for the 2TB capacity.

"We were proud to erect the NVMe era last year with the introduction of our 950 PRO SSD. Now, with the introduction of the NVMe 960 PRO and 960 EVO SSDs, Samsung is once again taking the next step in the multi-terabyte SSD technology and the storage revolution, providing users higher capacities and speeds than ever before within an NVMe PCIe drive to create new possibilities for consumers and business professionals," Kim added.

The 960 EVO is available in 250GB, 500GB and 1TB capacities3 and provide users with next-generation personal computing performance. The new Samsung Intelligent TurboWrite technology makes its debut in the 960 EVO and accelerates sequential read and write speeds, that reach peaks of 3,200 MB/s and 1,900 MB/s respectively.4,5 The 960 EVO's random read speed reaches up to 380,000 IOPS and random write speed up to 360,000 IOPS.6 The 960 EVO comes with a three-year limited warranty and up to 400 terabytes written (TBW), whichever occurs first, for the 1TB capacity version.

In addition to the industry leading performance, capacity and the reliable warranty-backed experience the 960 SSDs offer, Samsung is also introducing the all-new and fully rebuilt Magician software with a new user interface with which users can control various SSD settings including firmware updates.

The 960 PRO and 960 EVO SSDs will be available worldwide starting October 2016, with manufacturer's suggested retail prices starting at $329.99 and $129.99 USD respectively.
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42 Comments on Samsung Announces the 960 Pro and 960 EVO Series M.2 NVMe SSDs

#26
GhostRyder
FINALLY!!! I have been waiting for these for such a long time. Hello Samsung 960 Pro 1tb!!!
Posted on Reply
#27
alucasa
M.2 and mini ITX are indeed an issue because M.2 socket is usually on the back where there is very little, if any, air flow at all.

One way to get around that issue is letting it install vertically...?
Posted on Reply
#28
ironwolf
No people noticing/commenting/complaining over the massive reduction in warranty length? 5/3 years on the 960 Pro/EVO vs 10/5 on the 850 Pro/EVO. Or is this not even worthy of a comparison/discussion?
Posted on Reply
#29
R-T-B
I find it ironic they still have not fullfilled their promise of an edrive/opal firmware update "after launch" for the 950 pro, and it's successor has already launched.
Posted on Reply
#30
Disparia
ironwolfNo people noticing/commenting/complaining over the massive reduction in warranty length? 5/3 years on the 960 Pro/EVO vs 10/5 on the 850 Pro/EVO. Or is this not even worthy of a comparison/discussion?
Can't say it really bothers me. I'm more interested in the performance, capacity, and even color before the warranty becomes a factor. With so few problems experienced in my time I value warranties less and less -- within the scope of computers and electronics of course, vehicles are another matter.
Posted on Reply
#31
Slizzo
bugAs usual, no mention of random 4k QD1 performance... I was really curious what this new controller can do.
I'm looking forward to seeing what Allyn Malvantano gleans about these SSDs.
Posted on Reply
#32
Blueberries
ironwolfNo people noticing/commenting/complaining over the massive reduction in warranty length? 5/3 years on the 960 Pro/EVO vs 10/5 on the 850 Pro/EVO. Or is this not even worthy of a comparison/discussion?
Samsung's NANDs are the most reliable in the industry. It's the same 48-layer style NAND that's used on the 850 Pro. I would be worrying about the warranty if it was Toshiba or Micron for example, but not these.
Posted on Reply
#33
compvter2
ironwolfNo people noticing/commenting/complaining over the massive reduction in warranty length? 5/3 years on the 960 Pro/EVO vs 10/5 on the 850 Pro/EVO. Or is this not even worthy of a comparison/discussion?
I think 5 years for enthusiast and 3 years for "mainstream" is good enough. It is not like your m.2 "drive" will explode right after the warranty. Plus, no-one should really trusts anything important on one drive anyway. I had five Seagate drives in raid 5 array and they all blew up before warranty... and this was BEFORE they dropped most consumer drives to 1 year warranty (not sure what they are now, don't really trust that brand anymore). Don't get me wrong, 10 years warranty was awesome and "the thing" that made me buy Samsung PRO drive instead of non-pro one, but unless Intel decides to offer 10 year warranty with reasonable price for their drives i would probably go for Samsung drive again. I have bought both brands and none of them have failed (unlike those Seagate Hdd:s)
Posted on Reply
#34
Prima.Vera
I see that for almost 1 year now, the prices for bigger SSDs refuses to go down. Quite the opposite in fact....
Posted on Reply
#35
lorraine walsh
Well I would like to know price of 1Tb 960 Evo, that looks like a good drive for most gaming desktops. Also I hope this drive wont put out as much heat as the 950 Pro.
Posted on Reply
#36
bug
lorraine walshWell I would like to know price of 1Tb 960 Evo, that looks like a good drive for most gaming desktops. Also I hope this drive wont put out as much heat as the 950 Pro.
$479

And it will probably put out more heat, but supposedly it will dissipate it better.
Posted on Reply
#37
$ReaPeR$
i've got only one question. do they go into read-only mode after failure?
Posted on Reply
#38
Dethroy
Looks like the SM961 is still far more attractive than the 960 Evo. The 960 Pro is too pricey for my liking - just like its predecessor.
Posted on Reply
#39
bug
DethroyLooks like the SM961 is still far more attractive than the 960 Evo. The 960 Pro is too pricey for my liking - just like its predecessor.
Why do you say that?
I mean, SM961 is MLC, not TLC, so yes, it's expecting it will perform better. On the other hand, it's not available at or near MSRP, so...
Posted on Reply
#40
Dethroy
bugWhy do you say that?
I mean, SM961 is MLC, not TLC, so yes, it's expecting it will perform better. On the other hand, it's not available at or near MSRP, so...
The price for the SM961 /w 512GB is around 190€. Launch MSRP for the 960 Evo /w 500GB is $249 - so probably around 280-300€.
Posted on Reply
#41
bug
DethroyThe price for the SM961 /w 512GB is around 190€. Launch MSRP for the 960 Evo /w 500GB is $249 - so probably around 280-300€.
Amazon.de says SM961 is over €300. It's over $300 even on amazon.com.
But yes, if you could get it cheaper then the 960 EVO, it would certainly be the better deal.
Posted on Reply
#42
ManofGod
bonehead123figures...right after I picked up a deal on a 512GB 950pro like last week... :(

glad to see the performance steadily increasing though, pretty soon we'll have rigs that finish booting before we can get our fingers off the power button, and apps that launch before we even move the cursor :D
Perhaps in 10 to 15 years, I agree. :) However, at least for now, the underlying infrastructure of a PC is just far to slow for that. You will notice that for day to day stuff, a PCIe SSD will make little to know discernible difference for now.
Posted on Reply
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