Whats the difference between this and the MP700 TPU reviewed on spec? Curious which is the highest model.
Not a great start, products seem rushed to market, one turns itself off when too hot, the other throttles excessively. Why they trying so bad to save a few $ on not providing with a heatsink?
Why is everything getting ridiculously hotter?
Next gen CPU and GPU are getting hotter, now SSD.
I thought next gen should also mean better power efficiency.
The whole PC tech industry has decided they going all in on performance. Heat, power consumption have clearly gone down the priority list.
It seems utterly ridiculous this path has been chosen on SSDs though as the difference will only be seen in benchmarking.
We'll probably see a node shrink resolve all or most of the larger issues with Gen 5. I think the quick transition from Gen 4 to Gen 5 probably hasn't allowed for as much maturity on the node side of things and this kind of the end result of all of that. Give it time and I'm sure it'll reach better maturity though this early hardware for Gen 5 is looking rather subpar.
Node shrinks harm nand, thats why nand stacking became a thing.
TBF, the biggest source of heat on these drives is not the NAND, it's the controller, and as speeds jack up every gen so does heat. Node improvements will help fix that particular issue.
2.5" would help, so long as the metal casing was used as a heatsink. But that would require some kind of NVMe cable.
One already exists, called U.2, but seems they kept it of consumer machines for the same reason they dont get SAS.
So PCI Express slot drives would be the logical solution, but wait... a lot of board vendors now ship with barely any PCIE slots. (Current example, p460 DC SSD in my machine right now idling at 22C, load temp in 30s, is a 12W SSD under load).