Our editors hand-pick these products using a variety of criteria: they might be direct competitors targeting the same market segment, or they could be devices that are similar in size, performance, or feature sets.
Find The Samsung SSD 750 EVO @ Amazon.com If you look at all of the numbers, the Samsung SSD 750 EVO is a decent alternative to the 850 EVO, which runs on average about $25 - $30 more for the same capacity drive. The 500GB model that we tested isn't...
Samsung's latest triple-level cell SSD is the cream of the TLC crop thanks to its consistent performance. However, you're still better off overall with a MLC NAND-based drive.
Samsung takes aim at the new low-cost entry-level SSD market with another mainstream SSD that rips the competition to shreds. You will still have to pay a little more to get the best, but the small "Samsung Tax" is worth the premium. The 750 EVO offers almost identical performance to the 850 EVO as long as you keep the workloads simple.
The Samsung 750 Evo 500GB is a good SSD but it's just too expensive compared to its rivals. The Toshiba Q300 - with a similar 480GB capacity - costs under £80, yet offers very similar performance...
The SSD 750 EVO is a very good drive upgrade, but we'd still favor Samsung's SSD 850 EVO. (It's slightly faster and has a longer warranty, for just a few dollars more.) Read...
if your workload lines up towards gaming or regular usage on an internet PC, then we have to admit, this is looking to be a great SSD to work with. Any SATA3 these days however is getting that SATA3 bottleneck (hence I LOVE the new NVMe developments)....
There is no doubt that the Samsung 950 series of drives are industry leading products but this always has a cost associated with it. That is partially financial but also involves the use of an up to date motherboard with M.2 slot. The 750 series was...
For a client focused, performance driven and value oriented solid state drive, no other SSD on the market will be able to compete with the Samsung 750 EVO. You see outstanding performance out for both capacities, and as you witnessed even the lower of...
After launching the 750 EVO in 120GB and 250GB capacities, it appears the demand for lower cost products persuaded Samsung to introduce a 500GB model. I'm happy they made this move, as 500GB is a capacity sweet spot that satisfies the boot drive needs...
We are providing a second interim report at 4TB on our Project Kenko 01. For a quick background, we are taking two Samsung 750 EVO SSDs and writing to them until they fail. You can read more about the experiment here. Since this is a more modern SSD...
Samsung's 750 EVO is the cream of the TLC-based SSD crop. It costs a bit more than the competition, but to my mind, the smooth performance is worth the extra dough. Especially as RAPID can give your computer a feel that's otherwise only achievable with...
Let us summarise the most important positive and negative points belowPositiveSilky smooth operation as a system drive.Outstanding sequential reading and writing performance, even at very low queue depths.Excellent 4k random reading performance at very...
The Samsung 750 Evo is a costdown of the 850 Evo. Looking at the performance this is barely noticeable: especially in real world tests the difference is negligible. After all the controller and firmware remain the same. The usage of ‘regular' 2D NAND...
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