
"The Crucial T710 2280 M.2 SSD is about as fast as they get. On paper, it's rated for sequential reads and writes up to 14,900 and 13,800MB/s, respectively. I've benchmarked a drive from this range and got results within 5% of these figures (well, at least I did once I updated the system's firmware to fix a performance issue). The drive supports AES-256 encryption"
"A fact of life about running Gen5 NVMe SSDs is that they run warm to hot. And the harder you work them, the hotter they get. This isn't usually a problem -- it certainly wasn't for me when testing the T710 -- but if your case has poor airflow or all the fans are choked up with dirt, you might want to sort that out or, at the very least, use a cooler."
Storage performance repeatedly becomes the system bottleneck as faster storage increases demand on throughput and latency. Fifth-generation NVMe SSDs deliver roughly twice the performance of previous-generation drives, benefiting serious gamers and pro content creators handling 100GB-plus files, and prices have fallen since launch. System compatibility is essential: Gen5 drives are backward-compatible with Gen4 and Gen3 but will only reach peak speeds on Gen5-capable platforms. High-end examples such as the Crucial T710 offer sequential reads/writes near 14,900/13,800 MB/s, AES-256 encryption, TBW ratings from roughly 600TB to 2400TB, and a five-year limited warranty. Gen5 SSDs run warm-to-hot and need good airflow or active cooling.
Read at ZDNET
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