





🚀 Upgrade your workflow with Samsung 850 EVO – speed and reliability that keep you ahead!
The SAMSUNG MZ-75E500B/EU 850 EVO is a 500GB 2.5-inch SATA III internal SSD delivering up to 540MB/s sequential read and 520MB/s write speeds. Featuring Samsung’s advanced V-NAND technology, it offers enhanced durability and performance, compatible with most desktops and laptops. With a lightweight 45g design and a 5-year warranty, it’s a trusted upgrade for professionals demanding fast, reliable storage.










| ASIN | B00P73B1E4 |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Batteries | 2 AA batteries required. |
| Brand | Samsung |
| Color | Black |
| Computer Memory Type | DDR3 SDRAM |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (35,107) |
| Date First Available | 11 November 2014 |
| Form Factor | 2.5-inch |
| Hard Disk Description | Solid State Drive |
| Hard Drive Interface | Serial ATA-600 |
| Hard Drive Size | 500 GB |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Item Weight | 45 g |
| Item model number | MZ-75E500B/EU |
| Lithium Battery Energy Content | 5 Watt Hours |
| Lithium Battery Packaging | Batteries contained in equipment |
| Lithium Battery Weight | 0.8 Grams |
| Manufacturer | SAMSUNG |
| Number Of Lithium Ion Cells | 2 |
| Number of Lithium Metal Cells | 1 |
| Operating System | Windows & Mac |
| Product Dimensions | 6.98 x 10 x 0.68 cm; 45 g |
| Series | MZ-75E500B_ 850 EVO |
| Software Included | Ja |
| Voltage | 3.6 |
�**O
Edito: tengo dos y siguen funcionando perfectamente desde hace 3 años! ------------------------ Lo uso en Mac, con una caja externa que he adquirido de Inatek (poned en el buscador B00DW374W4), la de plástico con el botón on/off. Además, lo hago a través de un Hub USB 3.0 de Aukey (en buscador B00KR2I35A) porque me quedo sin puertos en el Mac. Ideal si trabajas con vídeo y archivos muy pesados. Como podéis ver en la foto que he subido, la velocidad que alcanza en disco externo es fantástica (412 MB/s escritura y 429 MB/s lectura) y Samsung entrega en este modelo 5 años de garantía. Ahora mismo en relación calidad-precio diría que mejora al anterior 840 EVO (con 3 años garantía), ya que el 850 EVO garantiza una vida útil mayor, lo que a la larga es lo que importa sobre todo si le das mucho uso y no quieres irte a un modelo superior (850 PRO). Lo más de lo más ahora es el 960 PRO NVME: http://amzn.to/2DyIwr4
A**N
Installé dans un hybride HP Pavilion x2 11-h050ef sans soucis. Installation simple. Attention, la vis de serrage est celle d'origine de la carte mère. Le ssd est beaucoup plus rapide que celui d'origine. Impressionnant. Démarrage de la tablette en quelques secondes. Une grosse progression par rapport à mon Samsung 830 de bureau. Concernant l'emballage, il est tout à fait correct. Le ssd est bien maintenu en place, bien que le cartons soit un poil fin pour le protéger correctement. Dernier point, faire attention à ce que l'installation soit possible sur les hybrides 2 en 1 notamment. Certains constructeurs soudent le ssd à la tablette. A vérifier avant d'installer.
J**N
I've been using SSDs for years now and once you've used one you can never go back to having a hard drive as your boot drive. I paid £160 for my first SSD which was a 128GB Crucial M4 in October 2011 and since then I've used lots of other SSDs in personal and client builds from SanDisk, OCZ and Samsung mainly. I bought the M4 because at the time it was one of the fastest drives available and crucially it had one of the most stable SATA controllers, which was important at the time because a lot of drives had fairly unstable controllers and often caused a lot of problems such as blue screens of death and system crashes. A few years later and after having used SanDisk and OCZ SSDs, the Samsung SSDs had become extremely popular especially when the 840 was launched in 2013 or 2014. I bought my first Samsung SSD in July 2014 to replace the SSHD that I bought for my ThinkPad which was an 840 EVO 250GB and since then I have only bought and recommended Samsung SSDs. After that I bought an 850 Pro 256GB for a build I did in November 2014, then an 850 EVO 250GB in March 2015 to replace the 128GB OCZ Vertex 4 in my desktop and recently this 850 EVO 500GB to replace that 840 I had in there previously. I used to be very active on an online forum and I've recommended these 850 drives to hundreds of people and I've never had anybody come back and say the drive failed or that they were disappointed with it. The 850 is a truly stellar drive - well-priced, fast and easy to setup. The chances are that you'll buy one Samsung SSD and then only buy them without looking at the other brands. The speed is great. This is probably the fastest SATA SSD on the market, when used on a SATA 6GBps connection you're pretty much guaranteed to get at least 500 MB/s read and write speeds with this drive. These drives were and still are exceptionally popular with members on the forum I used to post on and most people on there were able to get between 500 and 550 MB/s read and writes with these. For comparison's sake, the Crucial M4 I bought in 2011 achieved around 400 MB/s read and write and the OCZ Vertex 4 I purchased in February 2013 when it was the fastest drive available could achieve around 450 MB/s read and write, so for those upgrading from an older SSD this is a little bit faster. Most desktop boards manufactured since 2012 will have SATA 6GBps and most laptops made since 2012 or 13 will also have SATA 6GBps, but even on the older SATA 3GBps connection you're likely to achieve around 250-300 MB/s read and writes which is reasonable. Those upgrading from hard drives will notice a huge difference. A 5400 RPM disk usually found in laptops typically reads and writes between 90 and 110 MB/s and a good 7200 RPM disk typically reads and writes between 120 and 150 MB/s. An SSD like this is the best single upgrade you can do to increase general performance of your system and it's fantastic that these days it can be done quite cheaply - certainly a lot cheaper than it was in 2011 when I first bought an SSD. If you plan to stripe two of these in a RAID-0 configuration you're likely to get around 1GB/s read and write with these drives. Several users on the forum had these in RAID-0 and got these kind of speeds. I've presently got the 250GB 840 EVO and 250GB 850 EVO in a RAID-0 stripe set in my desktop and I get something like 1GB/s read and 990 MB/s write. The 840 and 850 are so similar that you can quite happily stripe them and the two drives typically get 500 MB/s read and write speeds in single drive configurations so you won't be losing performance by doing so. The speed is of course phenomenal but for day-to-day use I can't really see the difference between one and two of these drives, but for things like writing Adobe Media Cache and copying files there is a benefit to using RAID-0 on these drives. Of course, the benefits of this SSD are the same as using any other SSD. Compared to a hard drive everything is instantaneous, everything loads faster and the speed of your OS in general just improves dramatically. You'll never go back! You actually won't be able to, the speed of an HDD will drive you mad if you go back to having an OS installed on your HDD. In a laptop it can improve the battery life too, but I didn't really notice this when I replaced the SSHD in my ThinkPad with the 840. Speaking of SSHDs, if you're thinking about an SSHD instead of a large SSD like this because it's cheaper then think again. I had a 1TB SSHD, of which only 8GB was solid state storage for operating system cache, which meant that the OS would cache files to the 8GB solid state storage so it would boot and shut down quickly. but programs were ran from what was essentially a 5400 RPM HDD and the OS ran as if it were on a 5400 RPM HDD, so the benefits of the SSHD were minimal and it died on me after only a few months, luckily by which point I had replaced it with an SSD. When I bought my 128GB Crucial M4 a 500GB drive like this was way out of most people's reach - it would probably have cost close to £1,000. Even a 256GB SSD was out of most people's price brackets, but now with a 500GB drive costing around £140 and a 250GB drive costing about half that, there's no reason to buy an SSHD really especially if you own a desktop computer and can have a large hard drive to store data on. Even if this is your only drive, 500GB is probably big enough for you. Who really has more than 500GB of data? So, you'll never go back to having a hard drive as your boot drive and you'll also only buy Samsung SSDs after you've bought one.
J**I
SSD de impresionantes prestaciones, con una relación calidad-precio-capacidad razonable. Me sirvió para convertir un Tablet PC VAIO Tap11 en un auténtico PC de trabajo tras cambiar su SSD original de 120 GB (que también era de SAMSUNG) por este otro. En cuanto a los que dicen que no es compatible con MAGICIAN, a mí ciertamente me falló el reconocimiento del disco la primera vez porque ya tenía instalada la aplicación en el VAIO... Una vez la desinstalé y accedí al link de descarga de SAMSUNG observé que la nueva instalación limpia tardó un poco más de lo habitual en reconocer el disco pero, una vez lo hizo, el interfaz de la aplicación cambió por completo (El interfaz de Magician que me aparece con este disco mSATA es muy diferente al que me aparece con otros discos de la serie 840 EVO SATAIII, e incluso ofrece opciones distintas, pero funciona de maravilla y permite activar el modo RAPID). Aunque el VAIO TAP11 básico sólo incorpora un Pentium de 4ª generación y 4 GB de RAM el comportamiento con el nuevo disco es impresionante y no parece haber afectado a la duración de la batería del VAIO. Muy recomendable. Muy bien por SAMSUNG, otra vez.
A**O
L'ho usata su un Asus S56CM per sostituire l'SSD originale da 24G, (l'originale era usata come cache per velocizzare la lettura del tradizionale disco meccanico), e trasferirci il sistema operativo. Operazione perfettamente riuscita con un deciso aumento di velocità e il recupero di spazio sul disco meccanico. Attenzione che la schedina Msata originale è più corta e quindi non si possono usare le viti e colonnine di fissaggio originali: ho risolto isolando con nastro adesivo la colonnina originale che potrebbe appoggiare sotto alla scheda; la schedina viene mantenuta in posizione corretta direttamente dal coperchio del PC, eventualmente applicando sul coperchio uno spessore in spugna che aiuta a mantenere la scheda ben schiacciata sul circuito. In alternativa si potrebbero applicare delle viti con dado nei fori predisposti sul circuito, ma questo comporta lo smontaggio completo della scheda madre, che ho voluto evitare. Funziona perfettamente da ormai 3 mesi. Boot con Win10 in 10 secondi.
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