Friday, December 11th 2020

addlink Introducing its Fastest M.2 PCIe Gen4 x4 NVMe 1.4 SSD

addlink today announced the launch of the next-generation Gen4x4 NVMe 1.4 SSD. Delivering an essential gaming experience. The addlink S95 SSD comes with the latest Phison premium controller, PS5018-E18 and the reliable TLC NAND flash memory, attach external DDR4@2666 cache, and including SLC caching technology. The maximum sequential read/write speed can reach up to 7000/6800 MB/s, which is nearly 14 times faster than SATAIII SSD, 2 times faster than the PCIe 3.0 SSD. Also, it is completely backward compatible with the PCIe 3.0 platform, comprehensively delivers an extreme boost in performance for PC enthusiasts and heavy gamer player looking for the edge.

addlink S95 SSD brings to the customer better performance and reliable endurance. It supports the latest ECC technology, advanced Wear Leveling, Bad Block Management, Over-Provision, and TRIM features to guarantee the S95 SSD Reliability. The S95 SSD Combines with free addlink toolbox software, offer user an easy way to analyze and monitor the S95 SSD drive health.
Optimized for performance and high on style, the S95 offer capacities of 1 TB and 2 TB, with 4 TB model coming soon. It is ready for the latest AMD Ryzen 3rd Gen and Intel Tiger Lake 11th Gen with M.2 Gen4x4 platform and compatible with most motherboards and laptops from all the major brands.

The addlink S95 NVMe PCIe M.2 SSD come with warranty of 5 years and is available on Amazon now.
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29 Comments on addlink Introducing its Fastest M.2 PCIe Gen4 x4 NVMe 1.4 SSD

#26
AnarchoPrimitiv
MakaveliYou are reffering to this.

The 980 Pro and SN850 have a nice lead in Random read, the Sabrent closes that gap in Randon writes and the 980 Pro is at the bottom of the charts for that.

Yep, and small random reeads are what dictate the user experience, did you read the rest of the review? It basically lays out the case for the SN850 and 980 Pro offering the better user experience.
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#27
FLOWrescent
ARFLooking really good. It's time to buy now.
SATAIII drives are a thing of the past now.
Until more than a couple of games begins to fully utilize SSD speed, there is nothing to talk about. For workstations, yeah, long term investment. On top of that, sata still isn't that cheap where it should be, well it won't reach HDD price till like mid of the decade thanks to the virus that pauses further physical developments. Besides, vast majority are still on boards that natively support DDR3, so not sure why it's so priority to dump cash on niche things. Unless that you have free cash to plunge, because everything around here is bankrupting...
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#28
Makaveli
AnarchoPrimitivYep, and small random reeads are what dictate the user experience, did you read the rest of the review? It basically lays out the case for the SN850 and 980 Pro offering the better user experience.
No I only went there to just grab that pictures. :)

Of course I read the whole review on the date it was posted. I know one can feel the difference when on an optane drive, however i'm not sure how big the real world difference will be when you have 75mb vs 82mb when comparing at the 2tb size or the 93mb of the 1TB drive.

The SN850 looks good but the drive really needs a heatsink it runs hot.
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#29
Hardware Geek
windwhirlYou should wait for Sony to validate it. And NVMe support for M2 drives will be added later, anyway, it's not available yet.

On the other hand, you can use a USB 3.0 external drive with the PS5. PS5 games can only be played from the console's internal storage, but PS4 games can be played from external storage.
I'm waiting for the insanity surrounding the purchase of the new consoles before I buy. Once they are readily available and I can buy a validated ssd for the ps5, then I'll buy one.
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