Jeff C.
Comentado en Australia el 8 de agosto de 2024
I bought this at a significant discount to be the primary storage for my desktop PC. The price, performance and endurance/reliability of the 1TB SN700 represented a real "sweet spot" that was unmatched by any other 1 TB Gen 3.0 NVMe. In particular, the 2000 TBW endurance is 2-3 times better than any competing NVMe SSD and its read/write speeds also match the best in class.
Marie
Comentado en Alemania el 13 de diciembre de 2024
Ich hab diese SSD in einen gebrauchten Mini-PC eingebaut, der nun bei mir als Home-Server läuft. Hab da verschiedene Software in Docker und VM's drauf laufen. Funktioniert alles einwandfrei. Die Geschwindigkeiten auch sehr gut.
Elektro
Comentado en España el 7 de septiembre de 2024
He utilizado un par de estos discos duros en su versión de capacidad de 2T para mi Synology NAS 920+. Instalación sencilla como cualquier SSD y rápida detección por parte del sistema operativo de Synology.En un principio Syonlogy "mete miedo" diciendo que es un SSD no compatible en su lista de "dispositivos compatibles" cosa que es igual porque no da problemas. He podido activar la caché SSD de mi NAS en raid 1 sin problema alguno.De momento, contento con WD que tiene bajo mi juicio un buen precio en sus SSD cosa que SEAGATE no ya que se les ha ido la mano con los precios.
myo zaw
Comentado en Singapur el 5 de mayo de 2022
Used as SAMBA share on SSD NAS
Cory
Comentado en Canadá el 17 de diciembre de 2021
To address the one star review on this product and my own findings:First, I have a newly purchased Synology 1821+.I wanted to upgrade to an M2 NVME PCIE RAID 1 Read/Write cache for this unit.I tried the Seagate Ironwolf but later found out that the Synology is a Gen 3 device and not a Gen 4, so I returned the Ironwolf as they are Gen 4 and I was paying $110 more for no reason.I went with the WD RED SN700 x2.SanDisk was acquired by hard disk drive manufacturer Western Digital on May 12, 2016.OF COURSE they're going to use In-House technology, controllers, NANDs etc vs. any other company who have to source out controllers and NANDs. The only other exception is Samsung who also do In-House for their SSDs. Who cares that it's done by Sandisk - they've been around for years and the SSD is backed by WD's warranty.Officially, they're currently not supported by Synology - that's a new thing by them. They have their compatibility list of hardware, and guess what? You want a 400GB SSD from them that's been validated, you can buy that one, but it's quadruple the price of this SSD. No thanks. I'll accept the warning that it's not been validated by Synology. Even my WD RED CMR drives that I pulled out of my 1813+(which were compatible) and put into the 1821+ (officially not supported), but still work.I registered my warranty no problem.Not sure what the previous reviewer had issues with.Anyways, it works fine in the Synology 1821+ and even NASCOMPARES website did a review between this and the Ironwolf. Check that out if you're on the fence like I was.I have no complaints about these drives.