But if all manufacturers (it's strange that no one thought of this marketing ploy) made it possible for the user at the firmware level to select the operating mode of NAND chips, i.e. the ability to format them in TLC or MLC or even in SLC mode, then this would immediately change everything in terms of the popularity of any series, even such a shameful one.
4TB QLC = 1TB SLC, right? If the buyer can format it low-level, in SLC mode, the read and write speeds will be stable - maximum SATA3, right? And the storage time will immediately increase by orders of magnitude, as will the number of cycles (SLC has up to 100k cycles), right?
Why doesn't anyone sell SLC drives today, given how cheap SSDs are, and why doesn't anyone make it possible, at the firmware level, to format the entire drive into any mode from TLC to SLC at the buyer's discretion? In SLC mode there is no need for a cache, everything is perfect right away.
But no, they are trying to sell us SSDs only with the shameful TLC and SLC in the mass segment, although the buyer must decide for himself what is more important to him and what capacity he needs.
Try to buy a 1TB SLC drive on the global market for the indicated price of 4TB QLC Samsung...what doesn't work? Don't you think this is strange? What is the direct conspiracy of SSD drive manufacturers?