Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Goodbye and good riddance to the 16:9 aspect ratio

Goodbye and good riddance to the 16:9 aspect ratio
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Samsung's 860 SSD has been one of the standards for PC parts since it was released in 2018. Now, the company is ballyhooing its successor, the 870 Evo, its latest SATA SSD intentional for customer use that brings faster speeds as well-conditioned as lower prices.

The new compel is intuitively so fast that it can categorically reach the maximum practicable acceleration for sequential realize as well-conditioned as write on a SATA drive, with 560MB/s realize as well-conditioned as 530MB/s write speeds. The new paradigmatic also represents a nice comeback compared to the 860 Evo, with Samsung promising roughly 38 percent fitter random realize speeds as well-conditioned as a 30 percent comeback in sustained performance. The 870 Evo also gloss a five-year warranty, which is gratifying to see.

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The 870 Evo will be bettering in 250GB for $39.99, 500GB for $69.99, 1TB for $129.99, 2TB for $249.99, as well-conditioned as 4TB for $479.99. Those numbers go to show neutral how much prices have dropped in the two years since the 860 was released: in 2018, the 250GB paradigmatic started at $94.99 as well-conditioned as the 4TB paradigmatic cost $1,399.99 (although, obviously, they go for much cheaper in 2021).

Update January 20th, 11:30am: Samsung has inverse the prices for the 870 Evo since the original announced with orderly lower prices. This column has been updated with the revised pricing.

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