To hit 12PB over 12 years is 2.73TB per day. It's possible 2TB of NAND would hold up to around that number but it's another issue entirely to believe that Team Group will honor warranty on something like this ten years from now.
You better read the fine print of that warranty.
I've seen SSDs eat up their endurance rating with lots of small writes, so be aware that 12PB of "writes" may not be 12PB of files written.
Heh, exactly. The thing is, the NAND and the controller used don't even justify that 12PBW value at all. They just made it up to give it a USP for chumps who aren't smart enough to know better.
The best MLC SSD (Samsung 970 PRO) has an endurance rating 1.200 TBW for 1 TB, and everyone who knows a bit about storage knows TLC has a tiny fraction of the endurance of MLC. So the endurance rating of this T-Create Expert 2 TB of 12.000 TBW is an obvious bogus claim, no matter how smart their SLC caching claims to be. Unfortunately TBW endurance ratings are going the way if MTBF, they just inflate the numbers every generation to the point where it has no meaning any more.
So I don't like that this ridiculous endurance rating is graded as "fantastic" in the review. Team Group knows very well that no reviewer is realistically able to bust this claim, so they can really pick any number they want.
And this isn't the fastest PCIe 3 SSD as claimed either, that's Samsung 970 PRO, even the 512 GB version is beating this T-Create Expert 2 TB. It's even arguable that the 970 PRO is the very best SSD on the market, depending on how you weigh the results, as it's more reliable and has more consistent performance. If only Samsung chose to make a PCIe 4 version of the 970 PRO(MLC) with an updated controller, they would have ruled all the other SSDs in this review.