Samsung T7 SSD 1TB portable - unboxing

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Samsung T7 SSD 1TB external portable hdd unboxing
New generation external SSD disk
Light, fast, reliable and safe
Transfer speed up to 1050 MB/s via USB 3.2 Gen2 connection

It is light and fits in your pocket. The T7 portable SSD offers both high speeds and security for your data, making it an easy way to store and transfer large files. With the T7, you will enjoy high performance at work and play every day.

Transfer huge files in seconds thanks to the amazing USB 3.2 Gen 2 speed offered by the T7. Built-in PCIe NVMe technology enables sequential read/write speeds of up to 1050/1000 MB/s. The T7 is thus twice as fast as the previous T5 model.

Durable and secure design
SSD is short for Solid State Drive. The English name implies that the discs do not contain any moving parts. The hardware can be password protected with 256-bit AES encryption. It is housed in a durable metal body that will keep data intact even when dropped from a height of 2 meters. We can confidently offer a 3-year warranty on the T7.

Sophisticated temperature control
Use the T7 without worrying about the drive overheating. The T7's advanced thermal control solution uses Dynamic Thermal Guard to resist heat and control its distribution, so the compact SSD maintains an optimal temperature even at high speeds.

Management software
The T7 comes with built-in enhanced PC and Mac software to help you set up your password and get the latest firmware updates. You can also download the mobile application for smartphones and tablets with the Android operating system.

A solid-state drive (SSD) is a solid-state storage device that uses integrated circuit assemblies to store data persistently, typically using flash memory, and functioning as secondary storage in the hierarchy of computer storage. It is also sometimes called a semiconductor storage device, a solid-state device or a solid-state disk, even though SSDs lack the physical spinning disks and movable read–write heads used in hard disk drives (HDDs) and floppy disks.

Compared with electromechanical drives, SSDs are typically more resistant to physical shock, run silently, and have higher IOPS and lower latency.[3] SSDs store data in semiconductor cells. As of 2019, cells can contain between 1 and 4 bits of data. SSD storage devices vary in their properties according to the number of bits stored in each cell, with single-bit cells ("Single Level Cells" or "SLC") being generally the most reliable, durable, fast, and expensive type, compared with 2- and 3-bit cells ("Multi-Level Cells/MLC" and "Triple-Level Cells/TLC"), and finally quad-bit cells ("QLC") being used for consumer devices that do not require such extreme properties and are the cheapest per gigabyte of the four. In addition, 3D XPoint memory (sold by Intel under the Optane brand) stores data by changing the electrical resistance of cells instead of storing electrical charges in cells, and SSDs made from RAM can be used for high speed, when data persistence after power loss is not required, or may use battery power to retain data when its usual power source is unavailable. Hybrid drives or solid-state hybrid drives (SSHDs), such as Apple's Fusion Drive, combine features of SSDs and HDDs in the same unit using both flash memory and spinning magnetic disks in order to improve the performance of frequently-accessed data. Bcache achieves a similar effect purely in software, using combinations of dedicated regular SSDs and HDDs.

SSDs based on NAND Flash will slowly leak charge over time if left for long periods without power. This causes worn-out drives (that have exceeded their endurance rating) to start losing data typically after one year (if stored at 30 °C) to two years (at 25 °C) in storage; for new drives it takes longer. Therefore, SSDs are not suitable for archival storage. 3D XPoint is a possible exception to this rule; it is a relatively new technology with unknown long-term data-retention characteristics.

SSDs can use traditional HDD interfaces and form factors, or newer interfaces and form factors that exploit specific advantages of the flash memory in SSDs. Traditional interfaces (e.g. SATA and SAS) and standard HDD form factors allow such SSDs to be used as drop-in replacements for HDDs in computers and other devices. Newer form factors such as mSATA, M.2, U.2, NF1/M.3/NGSFF,[9] XFM Express (Crossover Flash Memory, form factor XT2) and EDSFF (formerly known as Ruler SSD) and higher speed interfaces such as NVM Express (NVMe) over PCI Express (PCIe) can further increase performance over HDD performance.

SSDs have a limited lifetime number of writes, and also slow down as they reach their full storage capacity.

Interfaces

Compatible with USB 3.2 Gen2 (10Gbps)

Dimensions (W x H x D)

85 × 57 × 8.0 mm

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Tenyleg milyen picike. Nagyon jol nez ki. Jol mukodik?

gabordiosi
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It's Solid State Drive, not the Hard Disc Drive

eugene
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Buy 500GB crucial at 3k and purchase a sata 3.0 case ₹500
₹3500 ruppes 500GB external ssd for you

sambitkumar