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What is a recommended SSD nowadays? I don't really have a criteria other than avoiding the noise - sata works well enough for me.
I've been buying Samsung (both SATA and NVMe), though I'm sure someone will tell me they went to crap too. At least the ones I have are on track to hit the 3 year mark.
For less critical things, I've used PNY pretty successfully (haven't hit 2 years yet, but haven't had any failures either). They're less expensive, and I usually stick to the 120-240 GB ones (basically they're boot drives)
Samsung did have a major problem early last year, but it seems to be limited to a run of products with a specific firmware.
I still have the very first SSD I ever bought, a 120GB Samsung 830 that is well over 10 years old. It is the OS drive in my server and thus running 24/7. No errors yet.
Splurged some crazy money on a Crucial MX 256GB, 320€ IIRC, I still think about it sometimes but god what an upgrade :-)
After years as my boot device it spent running lots of familys PCs witbout a hiccup, now it's retired as a small extra ssd in a linux box.
I remember there were single cells, double now triple and quadruple, and back in the day single wete considered the best, IDK what's the story today.
I have a Samsung 840 (or maybe 860? Idk) 512GB bought back when 512GB was like 500$+ lol
The thing is still trucking along, being moved from system to system as the years go by. I don't even remember what system it is in currently, but I know at some point I'll open up a computer or server around my place and there it'll be again lmao
A poem by ChatGPT lol: In a corner of the world, where tech giants lay, A solid state drive, aging, in the fray. Once young and swift, at data's beck and call, Now an elder, but dutiful, standing tall.
Through systems it travels, a nomad of sorts, From desktops to servers, in electronic forts. Its label worn, its edges frayed, But in the dance of bytes, it's never swayed.
"I don't remember," the owner chuckles with glee, "Which system it's in, it's a mystery to me. But sure as the sun rises, and the moon takes its leave, I'll find it again, in that, I believe."
It's seen the rise of clouds, and the fall of disks, Survived the digital tumults, with its own little risks. Yet here it remains, a silent witness to all, A testament to duty, refusing to fall.
For in its circuits, a heart beats on, A steadfast guardian, from dusk till dawn. From system to system, it wearily sighs, Yet embraces its role, under digital skies.
So here's to the drive, with its storied past, A relic of tech, that continues to last. May it find its rest, in a worthy machine, A dutiful servant, unseen but serene.
This is ridiculously good :D
Lol, yep. I've got a 32 GB Kingston SATA SSD (first one I could afford back in 2014) still going strong 24/7. I think it's either in my router or my HomeAssistant box.
I have Samsung and crucial ssds across 3 systems and only 1 Samsung has failed after 3 years of almost 24hour uptime across those 3 years.
All my machines use WD nvme/sata, with a laptop running ADATA nvme. The only ssd I've had fail was at the very very bleeding edge of ssd availability ("sale" of ~$100 for 30GB) with a Kingston drive, unknown flash mfg. Oldest (other than the Kingston) is when I installed (family member's box) a Samsung sata drive (830? 840?) that's been a trooper for the last... 11 years? No issues otherwise.
Oh, the original ssd (unknown brand) that came in that laptop, which I immediately cloned to+replaced with the ADATA, I stuck in my nas last year. It lasted less than 6 months, with no prior writes and the only reads being the clone, until the nas. Also I got warnings less than 6h before total failure. It was working as a cache drive. Replaced with WD Red nvme drives (2 vs the 1) and those are working fine. Pissed me off, that laptop msrp at... $2700? I bought at $1400 + nvme and ram. For them to want such a fucking nutty upcharge and then use a no-name nvme that dies with moderate use (plex system mostly, couple users) is bullshit. Not surprising, it's came out of an Acer Predator, but fuck.
E: oh and that little pos decided to die when I was on vacation at a convention, so scrambling to get to a laptop and tell the nas to stop using the failing/failed drive, worried about the data, was a panic detour that I did not need...
Either Samsung or crucial for me. Had a SanDisk that died on me.
I've had failures with Patriot and Kingston but all 4 Samsungs I've since put in various PCs have been reliable
I've seen a lot of people recommending Teamgroup. They tend to be cheaper than Samsung but with supposedly better quality than other cheap options. I haven't looked up any studies yet though.
Samsung SSD/NVME.
They eventually die, but it’s later than sooner.
My issues with Samsung nowadays is that they offer a very low TBW warranty compared to other brands like Kingston.
I wanted to buy a 1TB storage for my games and I couldn't decide between Samsung and Kingston. Samsung had a 600TBW warranty for the 1TB model, Kingston had 800. I ended up choosing the KC3000 from Kingston.
If your only criteria is noise, even the shittiest 1TB-10$ SSD from Aliexpress will do, except when it eventually explodes.
Bonus: use the machine with the $10 drive at your desk, so when it flashbangs you, it will jolt you awake and get that blood pumping. Like a sudden exercise routine! 13 out of 9 cardiologists recommend it!
RAID1
RAID10
Who makes that brand? Proctor and Gamble?
Can't be Gamble since it's trying to reduce losses, not incur them. 🤭