(Image Credit: Audiophile Style) Sound player was loading. PC audio has come a long time. The money is very worth a decent soundcard. Many audiophiles spend vast amounts of money in pursuit of an exceptional audio performance, but there are limits. Is this a high-quality hard drive though? Grab the tin foil hat. Toms Hardware focused our attention on the Audiophile Style forums, where a developer proudly showed off a 1TB NVMe SSD with several optimisations that aim to provide better 3D and dynamic sound that no other SSD currently can offer or even close to. Yeah. Sure. Right. The driving speed is good enough. There are 1TB-records or 3333GB of pSLC, which is apparently the psc. A clock oscillator is on, there are audionote capacitors, an increased PCB copper isolation, gold plated connectors, and even an external 5V psi power. It would sound pretty good if we were dealing with analog signal. If the attention is on the electronics side of things, it will probably improve a analog sound, but at the end of the day it’s not. Between your ears and the SSD have several other influential issues. How long has the best PC for gaming? The chips in the top of Intel and AMD. Whoever wants the greatest digital image book? The perfect shot is what awaits you. Go ahead and play the game. The problem with this idea is that an SSD is that it stores binary data stored in the one and the one. Those 1,0 and 0s should not encounter any problems or modification until they reach the audio processing section of the PC or DAC where they’re converted to analog. That’s the area where electronic components will affect audio fidelity and, by that time, the influence of the SSDs is irrelevant. Since the storage area is so important, why is it an audiophile thinks that the CD cost 10c to manufacture, isn’t it about the value of a $25-a-so resemblance of another record player? It’s interesting to read the comments from users in the Audiophile Style forum who really believe their ears can detect the difference between this SSD and a regular consumer drive. I wonder whether a blind audio test would show the same effect. Confirmation bias is at its highest level. I’m actually a little bit angry at listening. The highest quality speakers are the real investment. I have an set of Klipsch Reference speakers that I have already heard for ten years, and these are worth every one of the nearly $5000 I spent on them. If my computer connects to a Rotel amp, then that SSD would have 100% blown effect. We only get a bit drunk about that stupidity of an audiophile SSD. The price is unknown, but it’ll probably not reach $100 for the Ethernet cable. Or is it going to happen? Someone who is too little money will buy it. A bad man is quickly separating his money from his family.