Thursday, January 12th 2023

Samsung Electronics Unveils High-Performance PC SSD That Raises Everyday Computing and Gaming to a New Level

Samsung Electronics today announced production readiness of a high-performance PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD, the PM9C1a. Integrated with a new controller based on Samsung's cutting-edge 5-nanometer (nm) process and the company's seventh-generation V-NAND technology, the PM9C1a will provide elevated computing and gaming performance in PCs and laptops.

"Our new PM9C1a SSD will deliver a robust combination of superior performance, greater power efficiency and increased security, which are the qualities that matter most to PC users," said Yong Ho Song, Executive Vice President of Memory Solution Product & Development at Samsung Electronics. "We are committed to creating storage that satisfies the diverse and changing market requirements as we continue to advance innovation in the PC SSD space."
With top-tier speeds, the PM9C1a SSD is ideal for everyday use as well as for more demanding computing and gaming applications. Leveraging the PCIe 4.0 interface, Samsung's PM9C1a boasts a 1.6x faster sequential read speed and a 1.8x faster sequential write speed than its previous storage offering (PM9B1), reaching 6,000 megabytes per second (MB/s) and 5,600 MB/s, respectively. Additionally, random read and write speeds can support up to 900K input/output operations per second (IOPS) and 1,000K IOPS, respectively.

The PM9C1a also offers up to 70% more power efficiency per watt than its predecessor. This means the new SSD can handle the same amount of tasks using significantly less power. Furthermore, when a notebook PC goes into standby mode, the SSD will use approximately 10% less power.

To address the rising need for stronger security measures, the PM9C1a features powerful security. The SSD supports the Device Identifier Composition Engine (DICE) security standard created by the Trusted Computing Group (TCG), a global organization that develops open standards for computing security. DICE securely generates cryptographic keys inside the SSD, providing device authentication to protect against supply chain attacks—cyberattacks that target companies through vulnerabilities in their supplier network—as well as attestation to prevent any firmware tampering.

Samsung's PM9C1a SSDs will be available in 256 GB, 512 GB and 1 TB storage capacities in a M.2 form factor (22 mm x 30 mm, 22 mm x 42 mm, 22 mm x 80 mm).
Source: Samsung
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34 Comments on Samsung Electronics Unveils High-Performance PC SSD That Raises Everyday Computing and Gaming to a New Level

#26
kapone32
FeelinFroggyEven at 100gb, that is still 15 games on a 2tb drive. Do you play that many games at once? I am sure my gaming is different as I like a lot of single player RPG, but usually I have a max of 5 games running in my rotation. It's more than likely 2-3.
If you take advantage of Epic from the beginning you would have about 220+ Games to play. It doesn't matter what you are currently playing sometimes you want to get back into a Game and don't let me talk about Humble Choice. The industry needs to improve we are at QLC but still handicapped to 4 TB Maximums. We need to be more vocal in resistance to that.
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#27
Nuke Dukem
kapone32If you take advantage of Epic from the beginning you would have about 220+ Games to play. It doesn't matter what you are currently playing sometimes you want to get back into a Game and don't let me talk about Humble Choice. The industry needs to improve we are at QLC but still handicapped to 4 TB Maximums. We need to be more vocal in resistance to that.
Wait, do you seriously have 18+ TB of SSD storage on one single machine? What the hell do you do with it?
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#28
DrCR
Nuke DukemWait, do you seriously have 18+ TB of SSD storage on one single machine? What the hell do you do with it?
If he does, sounds like he uses it … for storage. ;p
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#29
bug
kapone32If you take advantage of Epic from the beginning you would have about 220+ Games to play. It doesn't matter what you are currently playing sometimes you want to get back into a Game and don't let me talk about Humble Choice. The industry needs to improve we are at QLC but still handicapped to 4 TB Maximums. We need to be more vocal in resistance to that.
Cell stacking suffers from diminishing returns. Take a hypothetical 2TB SLC drive and replace the flash with MLC, you get a 4TB drive. Easy win. Take a hypothetical 2TB MLC drive and replace the flash with TLC, you get a 3TB drive. Still a win. Take another hypothetical 2TB TLC drive and replace the flash with QLC, you get a 2.66TB drive. Another win, but rather marginal now. QLC (and anything beyond) will not enable easy capacity gains. It will however enable guaranteed loss of endurance and higher latencies (mind you, still perfectly fine for a storage volume).
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#30
stimpy88
Erm... PCIe 4.0? No thanks, already there and don't need a non-tangible 1-3% boost on what my high-end drive already does.
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#31
bug
stimpy88Erm... PCIe 4.0? No thanks, already there and don't need a non-tangible 1-3% boost on what my high-end drive already does.
Stand your ground. PCIe 5.0 would have made that an easy 2-4% boost, don't settle for anything less :rockout:
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#32
stimpy88
bugStand your ground. PCIe 5.0 would have made that an easy 2-4% boost, don't settle for anything less :rockout:
Who needs more than 640Kb right?
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#33
bug
stimpy88Who needs more than 640Kb right?
Right. PCIe 4.0 SSDs is what holding computing back these days, I stand corrected.
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#34
Prima.Vera
What is so special about those drives? They are DRAM-less, low capacity and PCIe 4.0.
And knowing greedy Samsung, they will price those at least 20% higher than competition.
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