Except that they do require multi-terabyte sizes. Anything smaller than that is more easily "moved around" using Google Drive/Dropbox/whatever.
BS argment. Very few people are moving around terabytes of data on USB sticks. Those that need that kind of capacity use external drives (SSD's or even HDD's) not flimsy USB sticks that top out at 1TB with 114€+ prices while 1TB NVME M.2 costs 80€ and offers faster speeds.
Dude, it's not 2004 anymore. You can get USB stick with 64GB for 10 Euros or 128GB for 17 Euros. You won't be able to buy a quarter of NVMe drive for that.
17€ - With a fraction of the speed of the NVME drive. Or did you forgot to add that?
USB sticks have stagnated for years now.
But okay- let me give you some examples:
✔ Preisvergleich für Patriot Supersonic Rage Prime 250GB ✔ Produktinfo ⇒ Typ: Öse, Slider • Schnittstelle: USB-A 3.1 (10Gb/s) • Kapazität: 250GB (entspricht ca. 232.83GiB, weiter… ✔ USB-Sticks ✔ Testberichte ✔ Günstig kaufen
geizhals.eu
48€. Drive mentioned in this article. 250GB capacity and 600MB/s best case speed. Likey much less when transfering a bunch of small files (the achilles heel of integrated USB sticks since forever vs NVME).
✔ Preisvergleich für SilverStone MS12 ✔ Bewertungen ✔ Produktinfo ⇒ Anschluss intern: 1x M.2 (PCIe 3.0 x4, 2280/2260/2242, NVMe 1.3) • Formfaktor: M.2 (2280/2260/2242) • Ans… ✔ Externe Gehäuse ✔ Testberichte ✔ Günstig kaufen
geizhals.eu
✔ Preisvergleich für Patriot P300 256GB, M.2 2280 / M-Key / PCIe 3.0 x4 (P300P256GM28) ✔ Bewertungen ✔ Produktinfo ⇒ Kapazität: 256GB (entspricht ca. 238.42GiB, weiterführende Informationen hierzu ) • Bauform: Solid State … ✔ Solid State Drives (SSD) ✔ Testberichte ✔ Günstig kaufen
geizhals.eu
Total 88€. Same capacity but double the speed (but not double the price). And this is using one of the most expensive external enclosures. And user has a choice with a cable to use the USB-C or USB-A port where as the Patriot drive only offers USB-A.
There are cheaper ones by Silverstone that likely match or exceed the speed of the Patriot drive while costing roughly the same with the NVME included. Like this one:
https://geizhals.eu/silverstone-ms10-sst-ms10c-71145-a2067336.html
Even cheaper than the Patriot drive when using SATA M.2 instead of NVME due to this enclosure not supporting NVME.
Now yes i aknowledge that DIY is not for everyone and that there is a market for ready to use solutions.
But dont come here telling me that these solutions are anything but slow stagnating tech and that people are moving around 1TB USB sticks.
Hardwarelxx also points this out in their review of the 1TB variant of this drive:
The prices for 1 TB USB sticks range from 140 euros to 280 euros without evaluating the performance, so the price is in the middle. For the same money, however, you can also get an external SSD, which is visibly larger, but can also be significantly more powerful.
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