- Joined
- Feb 20, 2019
- Messages
- 8,339 (3.91/day)
System Name | Bragging Rights |
---|---|
Processor | Atom Z3735F 1.33GHz |
Motherboard | It has no markings but it's green |
Cooling | No, it's a 2.2W processor |
Memory | 2GB DDR3L-1333 |
Video Card(s) | Gen7 Intel HD (4EU @ 311MHz) |
Storage | 32GB eMMC and 128GB Sandisk Extreme U3 |
Display(s) | 10" IPS 1280x800 60Hz |
Case | Veddha T2 |
Audio Device(s) | Apparently, yes |
Power Supply | Samsung 18W 5V fast-charger |
Mouse | MX Anywhere 2 |
Keyboard | Logitech MX Keys (not Cherry MX at all) |
VR HMD | Samsung Oddyssey, not that I'd plug it into this though.... |
Software | W10 21H1, barely |
Benchmark Scores | I once clocked a Celeron-300A to 564MHz on an Abit BE6 and it scored over 9000. |
Terrible HDD-like speeds when the cache is full, and the size of the cache is proportional to the free space remaining. If your SSD is 80% full, you'll blow through the cache in 10 seconds and then you have a shitty drive that's as bad as a mechanical hard drive from 25 years ago.What's problem with QLC?
Also, the endurance is 1/4 of the TLC NAND, and that limits what you can use the drive for. They're a poor choice for anything that's doing large writes to the drive, whether that's in a PC or a storage device.
Read the pricing and alternatives section of the conclusion. The $/TB chart uses the numbers of other drives at their review price. The competitive SN770 and SN580 have come down in price with the general decline in global NAND pricing since their launch, so their $75/TB showing in the chart is contradicted by W1zzard stating that the faster, better, TLC-equipped SN770 2TB is $120 right now, not $150 as per the chart at $75/TB.is it not cheaper at $56 per TB? TBH I don't keep track of the differences between them so genuine question?
Regional pricing makes a big difference too; My NV2, NV3, SN580, SN770, NM790 prices are different to W1zzard's - you basically need to know which drives are low-endurance, cache-sensitive QLC, and then work out if you're getting a deal or getting ripped off on a drive-by-drive, country-by-country basis.
QLC drives aren't good for huge amounts of writing, so their applications are reduced. You'd kill it as a NAS/storage write-cache, you'd kill it hosting VMs with RAM overlap, and you'd kill it with regular video editing. As such, QLC drives are best suited to casual user OS disks and game libraries. Thinking of game libraries in particular, they tend to be full no matter what size your SSD is because you just evict 150GB games when you run out of space. The pSLC cache shrinks with the free space, so if you game library is almost full, you'll be copying a game to it at HDD-like speeds after the first 15GB have completely filled the almost non-existent cache.Tbh the cache is large enough that you'll have to try really hard to exhaust it.