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回報翻譯問題
I think QLC. do you know any way to verify that?
I think it wouldn't matter anyways. I think even a cheaper SanDisk nvme is already faster than what my Ryzen 5 3600 could handle.
Maybe they are a bit faster now. But not really that noticable.
But i also use zstd compression on that drive, so that might also slow it down a little bit. Zstd is quite modern, so it shouldn't have too much of a cpu impact.
this is the official specs but i don't see there : https://www.kingston.com/datasheets/snv2s_en.pdf
I'll say it again. Casual Gamers DO NEED nor benefit from NVME ssds that are the fastest around. Such as PCIE 4.0 / 5.0 drives. Most games barely utilize sata speed ssds, but for demanding or open world games, at least having some kind of SSD definitely helps compared to any HDD.
M2 SSDs in general helps due to form-factor. Meaning you can more easily have less physical mounted drives to worry about as well as the cabling that goes along with that. It also has helped with Laptops that means more then 2 drives could fit internally.
The faster more expensive nvme types are more suited for work stuff where you do heavy copies or writes. Like video editing and such.
Here you can read that it was TLC but the changed it to QLC: https://www.techpowerup.com/forums/threads/kingston-nv2-1-tb-m-2-nvme-ssd.298942/page-5