![]() This benchmark was run with both a 1GB and 8GB test size. Anvil’s Storage UtilitiesĪnvil’s Storage Utilities is a comprehensive benchmark that gives us a very in-depth look at the performance of drives tested. Moving to the larger 8GB ATTO test has a negligible effect on the 980 Pro 500GB, with results easily within the margin of error compared to the smaller benchmark set. Samsung 980 Pro 500GB ATTO 8GB Samsung 980 Pro 500GB ATTO 8GB Chart ![]() The margin of victory is slightly smaller versus previous PCIe 4.0 SSDs, but the Samsung drive is still clearly the front runner overall. Similar to the CrystalDiskMark results, in ATTO the 980 Pro tops our charts while still falling slightly shy of advertised sequential transfer rates. Samsung 980 Pro 500GB ATTO 256MB Samsung 980 Pro 500GB ATTO 256MB Chart ATTO was tested at both 256MB and 8GB file sizes. The ATTO Disk Benchmark has been a staple of drive sequential performance testing for years. ![]() The 980 Pro pulls even farther ahead on the larger 8GB test since its results improve over the smaller test set. Samsung 980 Pro 500GB CrystalDiskMark 8GB Samsung 980 Pro 500GB CrystalDiskMark 8GB Chart Using the 1GB test set, the drive does not quite match its advertised specs of 6900 MB/s reads and 5000 MB/s writes, but that does not stop it from easily topping our overall chart. Samsung 980 Pro 500GB CrystalDiskMark 1GB Samsung 980 Pro 500GB CrystalDiskMark 1GB Chartįor sequential transfer speed, the 980 Pro 500GB is in its own league compared to first-generation PCIe 4.0 SSDs. CrystalDiskMark 7.0.0 圆4ĬrystalDiskMark is used as a basic starting point for benchmarks as it is something commonly run by end-users as a sanity check. This test will be retired soon, since in the future essentially all drives will quality for all formats. The 980 Pro 500GB easily qualifies for all the formats on this test. It shows whether a storage device is suitable for throughput required at a given video format. This is a popular speed test in the video community. This allows us to see the difference between lighter and heavier workloads. We are moving towards using larger test sizes on our benchmarks, but on several tests, we also used the smaller default test sizes. The F6 key lets you disable the touchpad so that you don't accidentally move the cursor or enable the hidden numpad underneath.Samsung 980 Pro 500GB Performance Testing ![]() With one click on the F8 button, you can toggle between the screen projection modes across two screens. The engineers at Asus have done some fine work with this notebook's function row key, which gets its own dedicated row above the number-symbol row. The fingerprint sensor has been embedded inside the power button, and it does its job reliably. At the end of the day, it would boil down to personal preference, but ZenBook 14 OLED's keyboard just clicks better for me. ![]() It's a bit tighter compared to what you get with the MacBook Air, which also embraces a shallower vertical movement. The backlit keys offer 1.4mm vertical travel, adequate tactile resistance, and satisfactory upward feedback. On the positive side, typing on this keyboard is great, especially considering the laptop's slim profile. The F11 key is dedicated to the Windows Snipping tool by default, but the arrow keys could have been slightly bigger, in an ideal world. ![]()
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