![]() And if they had actually been tested, it would have been more obvious that a drive mentioned simply wouldn't work with an iPad. ![]() I am also disappointed that the article didn't involve real-world tests, since actual results often vary from what the manufacturer claims. Any drive around 500MB/sec is limited by SATA, any drive around 1000MB/sec is NVMe limited to the 10Gb/sec of USB 3.2 Gen 2, and any drive well above 1000GB/sec is NVMe using Thunderbolt 3 and not appropriate to mention in this article. It's pretty clear how the transfer rates break down in the article. This same mistake was made by commenter Seanismorris above, recommending a Samsung X5 which is Thunderbolt-only, good luck with that on your iPad. You can use it on a Mac, but this article is about iPads. Sure enough, I looked up the Glyph Atom Pro and it is Thunderbolt 3 only. This newer version of this drive has 2800 megabytes per second read speeds and 2600 megabytes per second write speeds." Now hold on here.those speeds are twice what is possible on an iPad Pro, if I'm right that the iPad Pro supports 10Gb/sec USB 3.2 Gen 2. ![]() The article says "For those who are looking for more, there is also the Glyph Atom SSD Pro. And they may work with different iPads using a Lightning to USB adapter. We have all the transfer speeds listed in the article. ![]() What are the transfer speeds of the drives? Will they work with other ipads, such as mini 5? ![]()
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