Hi,
Please consider adding more filter columns to the Hard Drive Mega List, such as one for each of the 4 performance stats (seq. read, seq. write, 32K, 4K random).
That chart is very useful when we shop for a drive because it allows filtering out drive sizes that we don't want to look at (e.g I only want to display 2TB drives). That's great, however, the only other filter there is Disk Mark, which isn't extremely useful because it's a derived score out of the different performance stats, and it doesn't allow filtering and sorting by a particular stat, say, random 4K. For example, for me, since most high end SSDs already have plenty high sequential speeds, I may want to focus more on the random 4K values depending on how i plan to use the drive, while still displaying all the other stats in their own columns for more visibility. This would make the chart a lot more informative for those of us who need more granular data.
Also - and this is a much less important objection - why are these charts still called "hard drive" instead of something more accurate and all-encompassing like "storage drive" since they are full of SSDs now?
Thank you for your consideration!
Please consider adding more filter columns to the Hard Drive Mega List, such as one for each of the 4 performance stats (seq. read, seq. write, 32K, 4K random).
That chart is very useful when we shop for a drive because it allows filtering out drive sizes that we don't want to look at (e.g I only want to display 2TB drives). That's great, however, the only other filter there is Disk Mark, which isn't extremely useful because it's a derived score out of the different performance stats, and it doesn't allow filtering and sorting by a particular stat, say, random 4K. For example, for me, since most high end SSDs already have plenty high sequential speeds, I may want to focus more on the random 4K values depending on how i plan to use the drive, while still displaying all the other stats in their own columns for more visibility. This would make the chart a lot more informative for those of us who need more granular data.
Also - and this is a much less important objection - why are these charts still called "hard drive" instead of something more accurate and all-encompassing like "storage drive" since they are full of SSDs now?
Thank you for your consideration!
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