• Hubi@feddit.org
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    2 months ago

    Is it though? Pretty much every single current-gen mainboard still comes with a number of SATA ports.

    • RamRabbit@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Everyone is going to buy M.2 SSDs first, and only buy SATA if they don’t have enough M.2 slots. I really doubt SATA SSDs are selling well.

      With that said, I don’t see SATA going anywhere. It’s (comparatively low) bandwidth means you can throw a few ports on your board and not sacrifice much. For some quick math: a M.2 port back-hauled by PCIe 4.0 x4 has 7.8 GB/s of data lines going to it. While SATA 6.0 has only 0.75 GB/s of data lines going to it.

      • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        SATA is really convenient for larger storage, though. I keep my OS on nvmes, but I’ve got a couple of SATA drive and a hot swap bay for games, media, etc.

        • clif@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          I’m still running SATA spinny disks for my big-ish data. I can’t afford a 16TB SSD…

          I know that’s off topic, but HDDs are still a thing too.

          • RamRabbit@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            I’m very excited for the day I can replace my spinners with SSDs. That day is coming, but it is not today.

      • DFX4509B@lemmy.wtf
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        2 months ago

        Even then, NVMe riser cards are a thing to just stick an NVMe drive in a spare PCIe slot.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          2 months ago

          Does require you to have the PCIe lanes for it, BIOS support for booting to PCIe (which Intel 6th gen core CPUs were the first to support. 4th gen never did but some had m.2 slots and NVMe support for secondary drives and the 5th gen X99s had some receive BIOS updates to support but that’s its own can of worms) and both Intel and AMD have historically been pretty bad about being stingy about PCIe lane availability

          Plus to run more than a single NVMe on a single slot your motherboard either needs to support PCIe bifurcation which is almost exclusively an enterprise feature or they need to have the right lane configuration available to support that x16 slot handing out 4x4 lanes (or 2x8/2x4 for dual NVMe)