A:AnswerHello,
Thank you for contacting us.
We would like to inform you that as per Crucial Scanner Tool CT500P2SSD8 is compatible with HP - Compaq | Pavilion 570-p064 and should work fine.
If you have any questions, we welcome your reply.
Have a beautiful day and stay safe!
Regards,
SS
A:AnswerThank you for contacting Crucial.
Regarding your query of the SSD, we are sorry to inform you that the P2 drive is not compatible with the system. In this case we request you to refer system manual for exact SSD slot. Once you have confirmed details of slot then you can buy the SSD accordingly.
Regards.
A:AnswerThank you for contacting Crucial.
Regarding your query of the SSD, we would like to inform you that the part#CT500P2SSD8 is compatible with the system optiplex 5050.
Regards.
A:AnswerThank you for contacting Crucial.
Regarding your query of the drive, we would like to inform you that the part#CT500P2SSD8 is compatible with the system as system surface pro 4 supports M.2 PCIE SSDs.
If you have any further query we welcome your reply.
Regards.
A:AnswerIn short, yes, because your laptop has an M.2 slot. Below is a longer version that may help you with upgrades in the future...
Modern laptops and desktops will more often than not support at least one of the two following storage form factors... M.2 and SATA.
SATA is a more legacy port that I am guessing is on the way out (for laptops anyway) due to it requiring larger drives and it being overall slower than M.2.
M.2, on the other hand, is a modern slot that allows for smaller, faster storage. The SSD you are looking at now uses M.2.
If you are ever looking to upgrade the storage on any computer in the future (other than recent Apple devices), make sure you look up the manufacturer's specs sheets to see if your device can use "M.2 SSDs" or "2.5" drives" (SATA)... if it can use both I would ALWAYS opt for M.2.
Also, if you have a HDD already but also have an M.2 slot, DON'T THROW OUT YOUR HDD! You can set up your new M.2 SSD to be the boot drive as well as your storage for apps and games, but your HDD can still serve you extremely well for storing files because you won't notice a speed difference and you will have A LOT of extra space for it! I currently use such a setup and it is absolutely fantastic.
A:AnswerThank you for your inquiry.
Regarding your query of the SSD, we are sorry to inform you that the part#CT500P2SSD8 is not compatible with the system MacBook Air 2017 7,2 hence it will not work in the system.
If you have any further query we welcome your reply.
Regards.
A:AnswerThank you for considering one of our award-winning Crucial storage products.
The P2 is compatible with your hp laptop.
Crucial is happy to provide customer and technical support regardless of where you purchased the product. Please let us know if we can be of any further assistance!
- The Crucial Team
A:AnswerThank you for considering one of our award-winning Crucial storage products.
Based on the information publicly available from the manufacturer and from our compatibility history, we unfortunately cannot confirm or recommend this product as a guaranteed-compatible drive for your system. You may want to reach out to Lenovo for further confirmation, but available seem to indicate compatibility for m.2 *SATA*, as opposed to M2. NVMe PCIe, which this P2 part is.
Crucial is happy to provide technical support and guidance regardless of where you purchase your product. Please let us know if we can be of any further assistance.
- The Crucial Team
A:AnswerThank you for considering one of our award-winning Crucial storage products.
Based on the specs of your system, an NVME PCIe M.2 SSD such as the CT500P2SSD8 should be compatible with your system.
Crucial is happy to provide customer and technical support regardless of where you purchased the product. Please let us know if we can be of any assistance.
- The Crucial Team
A:AnswerThank you for reaching out and for your question. I have looked up your motherboard and found that part number CT500P2SSD8 is 100% compatible with the ASUS ROG Strix B450-F. I hope you have a great day!
A:AnswerThank you for reaching out and for your question. I have looked up your system and found that we do not show part number CT500P2SSD8 as being compatible. While it does appear to have M.2 slots, they only appear to be compatible with SATA interfaced drives. I hope you have a great day!
A:AnswerThank you for reaching out to us and for your question. I looked up your Dell Inspiron 5570 and found that part number CT500P2SSD8 does in fact show as compatible. I hope you have a great day!
A:AnswerIt is M-keyed evidenced by the notch that is 5 pins in from the edge. B-keyed would have the notch 6 pins in from the other edge. B+M would have 2 notches.
A:AnswerThis IS compatible with a 2015 MacBook Air with an inexpensive adapter to make it fit the proprietary Apple SSD connector, available online on the auction site or the big river site, among others. In fact, I am typing this on my Early 2015 MacBook Air with the said adapter and a 1 TB Crucial NVME P5 (similar but later NVME model), so I guess it actually does work, and the manufacturer rep is giving wrong information. I guess they are correct in that the SSD NVME drive will not fit the Air natively, you need an adapter which just changes the pinout arrangement, no active electronics, which I guess is why it is inexpensive. You will also need a P5 screwdriver for the tiny pentalobe screws attaching the bottom of the computer. What this modification gives me is a 1 TB notably faster drive, although it does run hotter (case is warmer). The later MacBook Air and Pro are soldered, not the 2015 Air. The method I used to clone the original Apple (Samsung) PCIE drive was to use an external USB3 enclosure and clone software SuperDuper, although other methods to restore and reload your data can be used, use a web search to choose one that suits you. Remember, you will need to upgrade your MAC OS to at least High Sierra or later to have NVME capability. Also, you should choose to initialize/format the new SSD to Apple APSF to allow for upgrading to the latest MAC OS system (saves time later). If you use a clone program, just initialize the SSD so the system recognizes the drive, and the clone software will reformat and copy your present disk content to fill the new disk volume automatically. After cloning, you just open the case, use a T5 screwdriver to remove the retaining screw, pull out the old drive, insert the new drive already in the adapter, replace retaining screw and back cover, and turn on the computer with your new SSD. This was a very easy procedure to complete, actual SSD exchange only took less that 15 minutes, but longer to do the clone copy.