I’m guessing due to lower demand for SATA SSDs compared to NVMe, but still. Being able to use SATA for slower storage is useful, and SATA SSDs I find can be a good compromise in between NVMe performance and SATA HDD lower price depending on the use case.
I'm at the point where I'm looking to phase out my storage HHDs for SSDs just for the noise reduction but now that whole plan just had a monkey wrench thrown in it.
I did exactly this earlier this year (or was it last year? Can't remember). Any way, got rid of all the mechanical HDDs for NVME and SSDs. Glad I jumped on that before this clown world bollocks kicked in.
I’m guessing due to lower demand for SATA SSDs compared to NVMe, but still. Being able to use SATA for slower storage is useful, and SATA SSDs I find can be a good compromise in between NVMe performance and SATA HDD lower price depending on the use case.
Exactly.
I'm at the point where I'm looking to phase out my storage HHDs for SSDs just for the noise reduction but now that whole plan just had a monkey wrench thrown in it.
I did exactly this earlier this year (or was it last year? Can't remember). Any way, got rid of all the mechanical HDDs for NVME and SSDs. Glad I jumped on that before this clown world bollocks kicked in.
Yeah, me being too lazy and cheap to toss out my old HDDs might save my butt here.
I'd imagine it's exactly this... The question is whether they'll increase NVMe production, but somehow I think the answer will be no.
It's more likely they'll cut NVMe production too, along with HDDs.