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Friday, July 1st, 2016

    Time Event
    8:00a
    The Corsair Gaming K70 RGB RAPIDFIRE Mechanical Keyboard Review

    There already are dozens of companies offering literally hundreds of mechanical keyboards, covering nearly all shapes and sizes. Designers try to innovate and differentiate but this becomes exceedingly difficult as the number of companies and products continue to increase while the number of the different mechanical key switches is small. Today we are having a look at the recently announced Corsair K70 RGB RAPIDFIRE and its Cherry MX RAPIDFIRE switches, a new type of switch developed for gaming and, for the time being, is exclusively available to Corsair.

    5:30p
    ADATA Introduces Premier SP550 SSDs in M.2 Form-Factor

    ADATA has introduced a new family of SSDs that come in M.2 form-factor and are more affordable than the majority of M.2 drives on the market. The Premier SP550 SSDs in M.2 form-factor utilize familiar architecture, a controller from Silicon Motion as well as TLC NAND flash memory. The most advanced M.2 Premier SP550, the 480 GB, has hit the street at $120.

    The ADATA Premier SP550 is powered by the Silicon Motion SM2256 controller as well as TLC NAND flash memory produced by an unknown maker (though it's likely that the M.2 drives use chips from SK Hynix, just like the SP550 SSDs in 2.5” form-factor). The SM2256 controller supports error correction control and management technology based on low-density parity-check (LDPC) code to reduce data errors and increase data integrity. Besides, the SP550 drives use pseudo-SLC caching to ensure high writing performance as well as a dedicated DRAM cache.

    The Premier SP550 SSDs are available in 120 GB, 240 GB and 480 GB configurations; they come in M.2-2280 form-factor and use the SATA 6 Gb/s interface, which means that performance of the new drives is in line with that of 2.5” SSDs based on the SMI SM2256 controller. ADATA claims that the new drives feature maximum read/write speeds of up to 560/510 MB/s as well as 4K random read at up to 75K IOPS. Exact performance specifications were not touched upon by ADATA, but they should be similar to comparable 2.5” models of the SP550.

    ADATA Premier SP550 M.2 Specifications
    Capacity 120GB 240GB 480GB
    Controller Silicon Motion SM2256
    NAND Flash SK Hynix 16nm TLC (?)
    Sequential Read 560MB/s 560MB/s 560MB/s
    Sequential Write 410MB/s 510MB/s 510MB/s
    Random Read IOPS 60k 75k 75k
    Random Write IOPS 70k 75k 75k
    TCG Opal Encryption No
    Power Management Slumber and DevSleep
    Warranty 3 years
    Current Retail Price $49.99 $79.99 $119.99

    ADATA released the original Premier SP550 SSDs in 2.5” form-factor in 2015. The drives were originally positioned as ultra low-cost solutions, and in our review we found that ADATA was able to hit a good balance between price and performance, offering solid performance for a low-cost SSD combined with very agressive pricing. Unsurpsingly then, they have been among the most affordable drives in the U.S. retail for quite some time now.

    Finally, for retail pricing, ADATA has set the MSRPs of the M.2 Premier SP550 SSDs at $49.99 for 120 GB, $79.99 for 240 GB, and $119.99 for 480 GB version. This ends up being slightly higher than the 2.5” drives already on the market, though it's also fairly typical for M.2 drives as a whole.

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