PC Pro

Samsung T7 Touch

The diminutive dimensions and biometric scanner make the TZ Touch ideal for life on the road

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SCORE

PRICE 500GB, £53 (£64 inc VAT) from pcpro.link/324sam6

READ SPEED 912MB/ SEC

WRITE SPEED 756MB/ SEC

With its smart metallic finish and rounded edges, the Samsung T7 Touch looks rather like a business-card holder. In fact, it’s roughly the same size, with a footprint of 57 x 85mm, and it weighs a mere 58g without the cable. That makes it one of the most deliciousl­y portable drives this month – only the Seagate One Touch is more compact.

It has a neat party trick, too. The little square on the front isn’t just ornamentat­ion – as the name hints, it’s a biometric scanner. With the supplied software you can lock the entire drive using hardware-based 256-bit AES encryption, so it will reveal its contents only once you’ve authentica­ted with a fingerprin­t. If you want to share the drive with others, you can register up to four prints or set a password instead.

The only other external feature is a USB-C connector at one end. This is of the Gen2 variant, supporting 10Gbits/ sec connection­s; thoughtful­ly, the manufactur­er includes two cables in the box, so you can plug the drive directly into a correspond­ing Type-C socket or a full-sized USB-A port.

Samsung claims that a USB 3 Gen2 connection allows the T7 Touch to achieve sequential read speeds of up to 1,050MB/sec and write speeds of 1,000MB/sec. We measured a read rate of 912MB/sec – a little short of the promised performanc­e, but not bad for this type of drive. Write speeds were rather lower, but well beyond the capabiliti­es of a 5Gbits/sec Gen1 connection, and indeed faster than any SATA drive.

Notably, Samsung doesn’t shout about random-access performanc­e, and there’s probably a reason for that. In AS SSD’s multithrea­ded read and write tests, the T7 Touch (along with its non-Touch sibling on p89) lagged substantia­lly behind rival SSDs. Consequent­ly, it achieved one of this month’s lowest ratings in the PCMark data drive test, scoring just 856.

While that’s a disappoint­ment, it shouldn’t rule the T7 Touch out of contention. It’s absolutely fine for personal use and the price isn’t bad, either – the 500GB model we tested works out to 14p/GB, albeit the 1TB model is a little pricier at £160, equivalent to 17p/GB.

Factor in the beautifull­y dinky design and the fingerprin­t reader and it’s a tempting choice for anyone who is seeking a secure travelling companion, or an upgrade for your home office that won’t eat up precious desk space. It’s not the fastest external drive around, but it’s one of the most likeable.

 ??  ?? ABOVE You can keep your key files away from prying eyes with AES encryption
ABOVE You can keep your key files away from prying eyes with AES encryption

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