The flagship NVMe SSD with E26 controller is supposed to break 1000 MB/s speeds in PCMark 10 and 3DMark storage tests, and Phison will also show new M.2 2230 SSDs for handheld consoles.https://www.notebookcheck.net/Phison-plans-to-showcase-14-7-GB-s-PCIe-5-0-SSD-along-with-world-s-first-inexpensive-USB4-flash-drives-at-CES-2024.780521.0.html
And these SSDs will still have disgraceful read speeds in 4k blocks, about 50-100 times slower than RAM. Only the linear speed increases - what's the use of it when working with the operating system, right? And why do ordinary buyers need such drives, right? Only those who engage in intensive non-linear editing will probably appreciate their linear speeds, and only if the recording speed on the entire disk volume exceeds at least half of the recording speed...