Skip to content

November 16, 2016

Samsung NVMe SSD 960 EVO Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET

by John_A

samsung960.jpg

The new Samsung SSD 960 Evo

Dong Ngo/CNET

The Samsung SSD 850 Evo is one of the most popular solid-state drives (SSDs) on the market, and now there’s a much faster upgrade for it, the 960 Evo that Samsung announced to day. But this new drive can’t literally take the place of its predecessor. It’s available only in the new M.2 design, and not the traditional 2.5-inch SATA design.

M.2 is a new interface that uses the PCI Express standard, one that was once reserved only for video cards, to connect to a computer’s main board. This interface allows for much higher bandwidth (currently up to 32Gb/s or 4,000MB/s) compared to that of the existing SATA, which caps at just 6Gbps. That said, M.2 is a new upcoming interface standard that’s expected to replace SATA completely in the future. The fact Samsung doesn’t offer an SATA version of the 960 Evo is a clear indication of this trend. To use an M.2 drive, your computer needs to have an M.2 slot or, for desktops, you will need a PCIe adapter.

Samsung says the new 960 Evo has a top read copy speed of up to 3,200MB/s and a write speed of up to 1,900MB/s. Its random access performance is upward of 380,000 IOPS, making it one of the fastest SSDs on the market.

It shares similar features as the older brother, however. The new drive, too, uses Samsungs 3D VNAND flash memory and also supports TurboWrite, a technique that uses a small amount of of high performance SLC flash memory as buffer to significantly increase write speed. It has a new five-core controller, four of which manage the NAND performance, with the last core dedicated to optimizing the communication between the host computer and controller. Like previous Samsung SSDs, the new drive also supports hardware encryption.

The new Samsung SSD 960 Evo is available in 250GB, 500GB and 1TB capacities at the MSRP of $129, $249 and $479. Pricing for the UK and Australia is not available at this time but those prices converted come out to £63/AU$171, £200/AU$330 and £385/AU$634, respectively.

Samsung SSD 850 Evo solid-state drive is a keeper

CNET editor Dong Ngo did a magic trick with the all new and excellent Samsung SSD 850 Evo. The kind of tricks that none of us can do!

by Dong Ngo

Close




Drag

Read more from Reviews

Leave a comment

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments