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A m2 slot and priority system in what hardware? I still don't know what hardware you're talking about.I'm assuming a m.2 slot. Do you think they will have a priority system ?
A m2 slot and priority system in what hardware? I still don't know what hardware you're talking about.I'm assuming a m.2 slot. Do you think they will have a priority system ?
I still don't know what hardware you're talking about.
So what happens if i take a current PCI-E 4 nvme drive that only does 4GB/s and put it in the ps5 ? What happens if I put in a PCI E 3.0 drive from 2013 that does 1.5GB/s . What if i buy the cheapest 6GB/s or 7GB/s nvme drive i can find but its trash and runs really hot ?
Ah, apologies I missed that bit.The PS5, as asked in his question.
What you see in the consumer space is cheap-to-manufacture (but high-priced) larger-node solid state semiconductor cells being used in drives which is fine when everybody has been bound by the PCI 3.x bus speeds since 2013/14. There are much faster solid state semiconductor cells but nobody is used these in drives intended to be plugged into a slow bus because that just would be stupid.
No, this is nothing alike. Seriously, really?!? Sony did not limit what type of drive you can use in PS4 and there were consequences for devs for that lack of foresight, this is not the situation on PS5 as you well know, nor are Sony limiting options to one manufacturer. My post was about lack of consumer choice for expanding the Series S/X solid state storage by only having Seagate as an option where the option is, you buy Seagate or you f*** off. If Seagate want to charge over market price for capacity, you again have the choice to pay or to f*** off.
If Seagate want to promote their drives to PS5 onwers, they'll be competing on price with everybody else who also wishes to sell NVMe drives to PS5 owners.
Yes because small node solid state offers better performance at lower thermal output. Necessity will drive expansion - excuse the double pun!!Are you expecting something else for the consumer space in a few years time? Larger nodes are used not only for cost, but for endurance. The smaller the node the lower the endurance of the NAND cells. Combined with lower endurance when go down the chain SLC - MLC - TLC - QLC, it becomes a serious problem.
That's the thing. Sony hasn't said anything about how or if they will qualify the drives. We know MS's solution to guaranteed minimum performance, but we have absolutely Zero idea of what Sony will do (if anything) to guarantee a minimum acceptable level of performance.
I'm assuming they'll do "something" but will it be enough? Or will developers have to potentially deal with users installing their game to a drive that is fine for the first few minutes but then performance drops as heat builds up, whether in the NAND chips or the controller. The controller is potentially the more serious chip requiring adequate cooling. At those speeds the controller chips get REALLY hot./QUOTE]
You'll have to wait to find out. I'm sure these things have occurred to Sony given they spent a chunk of their R&D budget on a custom I/O controller capable of very high bandwidth.
I can very much can see them doing this. This is bad for devs, they don't want to have to plan for I/O slower than X. It's X, if your drive is X-1 then too bad.Sony will more than likely Issue QVLs like every other hardware manufacture does and if its not on the list then they either put nvme into a non qualify mode or maybe just let the user continue at their own peril. I can't imagine a total lockout though.
With Black Friday coming up, it might be cheaper to buy it then too. Or wait a year an it will definitely be cheaper.Samsung has officially announced the price of their next gen SSD. $229 for 1TB 7GB/s and $149 for 500GB 6.9GB/s. Not bad at all for the asking price.
https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/samsung-980-pro-m-2-nvme-ssd-review
Samsung has officially announced the price of their next gen SSD. $229 for 1TB 7GB/s and $149 for 500GB 6.9GB/s. Not bad at all for the asking price.
https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/samsung-980-pro-m-2-nvme-ssd-review
SSD in the 2.4GB/s speed range is normally closer to $100 and you can buy Sabrent 1TB 5GB/s SSD (PCIe4x4) for $200 (basically double the Xbox SSD speed for a cheaper price).https://www.bestbuy.com/site/seagat...e-drive/6425015.p?skuId=6425015&intl=nosplash
$219.99 confirmed. Not cheap, but superfast (internal) NVMe SSDs aren't much cheaper.
I may be naive but I expect it to be around half that price. Under $150.https://www.bestbuy.com/site/seagat...e-drive/6425015.p?skuId=6425015&intl=nosplash
$219.99 confirmed. Not cheap, but superfast (internal) NVMe SSDs aren't much cheaper.
Except this one isn't superfast?$219.99 confirmed. Not cheap, but superfast (internal) NVMe SSDs aren't much cheaper.
Except this one isn't superfast?
As mentioned above, 1TB M.2 SSDs of similar speeds go for ~$100 nowadays, and they'll probably lower their price a lot faster than these proprietary cartridges.
OTOH, a NVMe that seems like a candidate to an expansion to the PS5 has appeared, and its launch MSRP is $230.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/16087/the-samsung-980-pro-pcie-4-ssd-review
This one has a 7GB/s max read throughput, but there's no competition at this read speed class, so I'm guessing Samsung is trying to bank on early adopters of PS5 expansion drives.
The issue with sabrent is the recommended(?) giant size heatsink. Not sure if sabrent would work without overheating in ps5 or not. Probably ps5 has some kind of cooling solution for ssd but would it be enough?
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That is probably one of the thing that some people have been asked. Does PS5 comes with a cooling system for the SSD expansion or not.The issue with sabrent is the recommended(?) giant size heatsink. Not sure if sabrent would work without overheating on ps5 or not
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