SAMSUNG 870 EVO SATA III SSD 1TB 2.5” Internal Solid State Drive, Upgrade PC or Laptop Memory and Storage for IT Pros, Creators, Everyday Users, MZ-77E1T0B/AM
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Ron Beaudette
> 3 dayI have installed over 100 of these Solid State Drives and have not had one that failed either at the beginning or now three years later. It is so easy to clone your existing windows system with no apparent changes. You need a SATA to USB cable adapter and connect the new drive to your computer. Download and install the Samsung Data Transfer software. Once done the pc will shutoff and you unplug your old drive and plug in the new Samsung. You may need a 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 adapter to mount the new drive. My customers are always pleased at the readily apparent increase in overall speed of the system. I give this product five stars and two thumbs up.
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Herminio Rau
> 3 dayI installed this in my 2011 MacBook Pro. Runs super well, installation was easy.
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oystershooter
> 3 dayreliable, fast, fair price. i would recommend
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James Brooks
> 3 dayNo comment
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James R Woolard
> 3 dayServed well to provide an isolated boot drive for Debian 11 and storage space on an existing nvme 128g equipped Win 11 machine. Reasonably quick for how i use it.
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Suranjoy Singh Singam
> 3 dayWorks quite well so far. Installation was very easy.
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pcdoctor
> 3 daySamsung has another winner on its hands with this 870EVO. There literally isnt anything negative for me to write about this drive. It performs as it should for a very reasonable price. Also, Samsung supports these drives by providing replacement services directly to the customer if they are needed. Top notch support. A++
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Monica Daniel
> 3 dayIt’s 4 tb, you can’t go wrong. I just had to do a little research for my pc to read it.
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Cedric
> 3 dayThis SSD is very fast and work great for my set up
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Whoknows
> 3 dayInstalled this drive on an old Acer. The software is pretty slick and the data transfer went smoothly but took several hours. No problem. The drive made the laptop better than new. Very fast and all date transferred flawlessly. Maybe five months later, the drive crapped out. I mean, none of the data was accessible. Fortunately, I had put the old drive aside and was able to retrieve most of the data that was inaccessible. I do not know why the drive died . . . I mean, it wasn’t being used on high demand programs . . . email, a crafting program . . . whatever.