![]() ![]() We have provided the results of testing in highly compressible data on the left and that of highly incompressible data on the right.Ĭrystal Diskmark provides us with the first opportunity to see the significant performance deviation when testing in compressible (left) vice incompressible data (right). Possible reason for this drop could be the drive being a very early prototype, or even that the memory may be asynchronous as its exact makeup can’t be confirmed. Up until recently, AS SSD was the only benchmark created specifically for SSD testing and it uses incompressible data. AS SSD, for the most part, gives us the ‘worst case scenario’ in SSD transfer speeds because of its use of incompressible data and many enthusiasts like to AS SSD for their needs. Transfer speeds are displayed on the left with IOPS results on the right. Things look a bit different with AS SSD where low IOPS and that high sequential write speed result in a very low Total Score. Looking at the Copy Bench below, things look similar where we have decent results when copying an ISO and game, yet speeds suffered in transfer of the Program.NGFF stands for ‘Next Generation Form Factor’ and was a working name for the new generation of PCIe solid state drives, now affectionately known as M.2 SSDs. #Passmark diskmark innodisk m.2 128gb iso While many imagined the M.2 to be industry standardization for mSATA and similar small SSDs today seen in ultrabooks, a closer look at PCIe demonstrates that unbelievable performance will soon be seen in a M.2 design even smaller than mSATA. Having sat with just about every SSD manufacturer at countless tech events this year alone, I can relate that initial predictions of 500MB/s performance for M.2 drives have now grown to unbelievable speeds of 1800MB/s. Looking at this from the most rudimentary viewpoint, a laptop today is much lighter, smaller, cooler, quieter, and faster than that of only a year ago, the result of flash technology and SSDs. #Passmark diskmark innodisk m.2 128gb macĪs much as I don’t like to admit it, Mac jumped way ahead of the pack in this storage game, even beating Samsung through use of Samsung’s own hardware! Adding M.2 storage to the mix, vice SATA 3 which had a performance bottleneck at just above the 500MB/s mark in data transfer, today’s MacBook Air is a shining example of what can be accomplished with it’s 12+ hour battery life and 800MB/s transfer speeds. Today, we are going to examine the ADATA AXNS360 M.2 128GB SSD, and we are only the second website that I am aware of to actually get a M.2 SSD in their hands for preliminary review the first being with my industry nemesis (meant in the best light) who even I have to admit is on his game when it comes to NGFF SSDs. The ADATA AXNS360 is not available at this point and time, nor will one find any specifications to help them along with respect to the drives configuration. The form factor is brand new, the memory is branded and not identifiable and the only component of familiarity is LSI SandForce’s SF-2281 flash storage processor (FSP)…well almost. #Passmark diskmark innodisk m.2 128gb mac.#Passmark diskmark innodisk m.2 128gb iso. ![]()
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