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#11
There are also PCI-E add-on cards that support multiple NVME M.2 cards in RAID.
At some point, it might make sense to upgrade the motherboard rather than trying aftermarket foo-foos.
There are also PCI-E add-on cards that support multiple NVME M.2 cards in RAID.
At some point, it might make sense to upgrade the motherboard rather than trying aftermarket foo-foos.
Truth.
I mean, I can benchmark my SN850 and see huge numbers. And I can copy a file from C:\folder1 to C:\folder2 and it's fast. I don't have a second NVMe drive at present, so I cannot go drive to drive...but obviously if I spent a lot of my day shuffling around huge files it would be a big difference.
But in day to day work, it's the fractional milisecond random access time that makes the biggest difference between a HDD and an SSD. You get that benefit with any SSD.