• Is it? I haven’t tried, but there’s a pretty big gulf between an NVMe interface max bandwidth and TB4’s. I mean, TB4 is pretty amazing (40Gbps), but NVMe m.2 is 128Gbps; Sabrent makes an m.2 SSD with 104kGbps read speeds; heck, Crucial has a $114 2TB m.2 SSD they claim gets 40k/33.6k R/W. And this assumes that whatever computer you get access to has a TB4 port, and not just USBC 3.0, which tops out at 5Gbps.

    But this all reminds me that I need to get a bigger NVMe stick and move everything off the SCSI SSD.

    • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Depends on exactly what you need. For a lot of day to day tasks, especially if you’re not moving around large amounts of data, TB4 speeds are probably fine.

      I wouldn’t do it with USB 3.0, but 3.2 gen 2 could theoretically work depending on your workload and use case.

      My usage barely benefits past 3.2 gen 2 because my disk is never my bottleneck. It’s either network or processor. It’s one of those things where everyone has to look at their own usage and decide.