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Reviews of Intel 2.5 inch X25-M G2 Series SATA300

Testseek.com have collected 65 expert reviews of the Intel 2.5 inch X25-M G2 Series SATA300 and the average rating is 88%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Intel 2.5 inch X25-M G2 Series SATA300.
Award: Most Awarded September 2010
September 2010
 
(88%)
65 Reviews
Users
(92%)
1051 Reviews
88 0 100 65

The editors liked

  • Excellent Performance
  • 34nm NAND Flash
  • Lower Cost Per GB
  • Random Write Performance
  • Blazing fast application open times
  • Low cost per gigabyte
  • Fast
  • Low power consumption
  • Works with both laptop and desktops
  • Includes 3.5" adapter
  • Brings new life to older laptops/desktops
  • Built in TRIM support
  • Works with Intel SSD toolbox
  • Threeyear warranty

The editors didn't like

  • Price Per GB High In Comparison to Hard Drives
  • Sustained Writes Lower Than Competing Offerings
  • Expensive overall
  • Modest write performance
  • Expensive
  • Lacks firmware level garbage collection

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Reviews

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  Published: 2009-07-26, Author: Geoff , review by: Techreport.com

  • Intels tick-tock approach to processor development delivers new architectures on each tock and then shrinks them to finer process technologies with each tick. This philosophy now appears to be influencing the companys solid-state drives. The second-g...

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  Published: 2009-07-23, review by: hothardware.com

  • Excellent Performance, 34nm NAND Flash, Lower Cost Per GB, Random Write Performance
  • Price Per GB High In Comparison to Hard Drives, Sustained Writes Lower Than Competing Offerings
  • The second generation Intel 34nm X25-M SSD showed it was marginally faster in traditional application performance tests like PCMark Vantage but was significantly faster in our synthetic tests like IOmeter and ATTO, where it offered performance gains o...

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  Published: 2009-07-23, Author: Nathan , review by: legitreviews.com

  • The Intel X25-M 160GB G2 Solid-State Drive is the real deal and is ideal for mainstream computers that will be making the move to Windows 7 when it comes out in October 2009. ...

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  Published: 2009-07-22, review by: anandtech.com

  • Abstract:  Be sure to read our latest SSD article: The SSD Relapse for an updated look at the SSD market.Earlier today the FedEx man dropped off a box with this in it:That's the new X25-M G2 I wrote about yesterday, which features a slightly improved controller ...

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  Published: 2009-07-22, review by: pcper.com

  • While the real-world improvements appear only marginal over its predecessor they *are* improvements. When combined with the drastic reductions in cost, Intel will be giving the competition a real run for their money. If the distributors can keep the...

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  Published: 2010-08-12, review by: techradar.com

  • Great read throughput, Great random performance results, Proven long term performance
  • Intel's update support

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(90%)
 
  Published: 2010-06-30, review by: digitalversus.com

  • Pluses, Excellent performance in all cases, Comes with a 3.5 inch adaptor to mount it on bays reserved for HDDs
  • Minuses, Only exists in two versions: 80 GB and 160 GB

 
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(100%)
 
  Published: 2009-10-06, review by: itreviews.com

  • Abstract:  Intel has changed the fabrication process that it uses to manufacture the flash memory in its X25-M SSD. The result is a slightly faster drive that is available in 80GB and 160GB versions and which costs quite a bit less than the original X25-M. Intel...

 
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  Published: 2009-09-02, review by: ocaholic.ch.english

  • Compared to the X25-m of the first generation the X25-m with 34 nm NAND Flash memory the second generation definitely is an upgrade. As long as you dont fill the drive to its top especially the reading performance is blisteringly fast. Also if you wri...

 
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  Published: 2009-08-18, review by: theregister.co.uk

  • Intel’s 34nm Flash memory die-shrink has increased the performance of its revamped X25-M and at the same time made the SSD much cheaper. Excellent news. ® More SSD Reviews... Kingston SSD Now V Patriot Torqx OCZ Vertex Samsung PB22-J...

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(85%)
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