this post was submitted on 29 Mar 2025
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[–] Thrashy@lemmy.world 34 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (7 children)

The trouble with ridiculous R/W numbers like these is not that there's no theoretical benefit to faster storage, it's that the quoted numbers are always for sequential access, whereas most desktop workloads are more frequently closer to random, which flash memory kinda sucks at. Even really good SSDs only deliver ~100MB/sec in pure random access scenarios. This is why you don't really feel any difference between a decent PCIe 3.0 M.2 drive and one of these insane-o PCI-E 5.0 drives, unless you're doing a lot of bulk copying of large files on a regular basis.

It's also why Intel Optane drives became the steal of the century when they went on clearance after Intel abandoned the tech. Optane is basically as fast in random access as in sequential access, which means that in some scenarios even a PCIe 3.0 Optane drive can feel much, much snappier than a PCIe 4 .0 or 5.0 SSD that looks faster on paper.

[–] Gg901@lemmy.world 13 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Why was Optane so good with random access? Why did Intel abandon the tech?

[–] Welp_im_damned@lemdro.id 3 points 2 weeks ago

Intel became broke and they had to cut it.

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