A:AnswerI’ve used these drives as replacements on 3 other Dell systems two of which weree laptops.As long as your Dell has a 2.5 drive this will be a direct replacement.
A:AnswerNo idea, but… It will work if you have a 2 1/2 or 3 1/2 inch drive space, of course with the 3 1/2 inch, you’ll need a tray adapter, which can vary in price. If that laptop has an M.2 SSD, then no.
A:Answeryes it should work if your computer supports SATA. if this is a tower, you might have to buy a bracket so it can be properly secure. remember to backup, clone, or do clean install of windows on the ssd
A:Answerif your computer support sata then it should work no problem. you may have to buy a bracket if this is a tower. you may also have to clone or do clean install of windows.
A:AnswerI believe your laptop uses nvme which is a different type of SSD and be careful of size. they come in different length. remember to clone you're SSD, or clean install of windows on your new ssd
A:AnswerYes it will. However, you will need to install it internally since the ports on your iMac are pretty slow. You'll also probably want a 2.5 inch to 3.5 inch HDD adapter. Some people just tape it inside their iMac. More recent iMacs have faster ports so an external SSD would work well. Note that if you replace your original HDD with this SSD your iMac's internal fan will run full-blast, all the time; very noisy! This is because Apple HDDs comes with a built-in temperature sensor; this SSD does not have one. You will have to buy an OWC combination digital temperature sensor/SATA cable ($thirty-seven dollars and seventy-five cents!) so that your iMac has temperature data from your SSD. That's what I chose to do. Alternatively, you can load a software app that lets you control your iMacs fan speed manually. But you won't have any idea of what your SSD's temperature actually is. Some people just set the fan to a speed level where the sound doesn't bother them and hope that keeps the SSD cool enough. That would probably be OK, but I figured that the money for the cable would be justified if it allows me to keep using my computer for another couple of years.
A:Answeryes this should work if your computer supports sata. remember to clone your hard drive or do a clean install of windows on the SSD. you may also need to buy a bracket to hold the ssd.
A:Answeryes this should work if your computer supports sata. remember to clone your hard drive or do a clean install of windows on the SSD. if you're cloning you need a usb to sata wire or dock.
A:Answeryes this should work if your computer supports sata. If you're laptop is really new, it may support nvme. remember to clone your hard drive or do a clean install of windows on the SSD. Since you didn't give the model of the laptop, I can't give you a definite answer.