That's assuming both drives have the same read/write speeds.I always thought it mattered more based on space available on the SSD…as in a nearly full large capacity SSD would benchmark slower than a lightly filled small capacity SSD?
I know some machines there is a difference in the speed of a 256GB SSD and a 1TB SSD. Is this the case in the M1 machine as well?
That may be the case, but does it matter in real life given human time perception given the high speed of these drives?I remember someone posting benchmarks showing that the 256 drive was around 20% slower than the 512 and larger drives.
Probably matters more on the 8gb Macs where the SSD is being used for application scratch, OS swap, and reading/writing files.That may be the case, but does it matter in real life given human time perception given the high speed of these drives?
M1 drives transfer up to 2100 MB/sec (2.1 GB/sec). Unless you are transferring some massive files a lot it is hard to see spending hundreds of dollars to transfer at 2.1 GB/sec versus 1.7 GB/sec.
If some is faulting at a high enough rate to push the memory pressure graph into yellow or red then they need to look at expanding their memory first. Writing pages to memory and then having to nearly immediately swap them back in to run is something you want to avoid no matter how fast the drive is.Probably matters more on the 8gb Macs where the SSD is being used for application scratch, OS swap, and reading/writing files.
I know some machines there is a difference in the speed of a 256GB SSD and a 1TB SSD. Is this the case in the M1 machine as well?