unskinnybob
Expert Member
I don't see the point of going to such lengths to make space for something that is already going to cost me an arm and a leg.
Load time, pure and simple. Or lack of load time really.
South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
I don't see the point of going to such lengths to make space for something that is already going to cost me an arm and a leg.
Also - your SWAP file shouldn't be on your SSD primary.
Load time, pure and simple. Or lack of load time really.
I have often considered an optibay but I'm not quite in the position to sacrifice my CD/DVD.
Moving away from OsX is definitely not a sacrifice I'm willing or able to make.
Of course it needs to be there !
It takes up negligible space, 4 - 8GB, and that is the one component of windows that really benefits tremendously from the super fast access times.
Well, the current size of my OS drive is 320 Gb and that is nearly full (no documents or user files).
So how are you proposing that I squish 320 GB into 128 Gb???![]()
Secondary drive. Do you have to run ALL your programs off SSD? I reserve my SSD for OS and core programs. Maybe my most played game if loading time is a factor. Also - your SWAP file shouldn't be on your SSD primary.
60GB is sufficient for primary OS.
8GB is not a negligible amount of space on a 60GB drive.Of course it needs to be there !
It takes up negligible space, 4 - 8GB, and that is the one component of windows that really benefits tremendously from the super fast access times.
Of course it needs to be there !
It takes up negligible space, 4 - 8GB, and that is the one component of windows that really benefits tremendously from the super fast access times.
You're unnecessarily shortening your SSD's lifespan with continuous writing of SWAP information. Not wise.
I wouldn't bother with a 60GB SSD, space really does become quite tight very quickly, especially when your windows installation start hitting 25GB, you couldn't run much more off it in terms of games.8GB is not a negligible amount of space on a 60GB drive.
That does make sense actually, might look into going this route.Why do you need a swap file at all these days? RAM is cheap and a 64-bit OS allows you to have more than 4GB.
That's not enough to sway me... I'm usually doing other stuff anyway while waiting for my PC to boot up fully.
Once it's booted it stays that way all day (in fact, it stays that way all week).
And any time saved in application load time during daily use, will be offset by having to go and find the user files on other drives where I moved them to save space on the SSD.
Sounds like way too much effort to me. I want to just plug a drive in and use it, not spend additional hours configuring it by having to store stuff in non-default locations.
get rid of the swap file completly...if done right everything will be faster.but it will cost even more than a ssd drive...
You're unnecessarily shortening your SSD's lifespan with continuous writing of SWAP information. Not wise.Then why pay so much for a device that suffers from that shortcoming?
HDD for storage, SSD for system and apps. Need both.
This is a common misconception. e.g. I've been using an 80GB Intel X-25M since 2009 as an OS & applications drive in a PC that is on 24/7. The media wearout indicator in the SMART data is currently at 97. That means that over about three years I've used only 3% of the drive's total lifespan. It's only people who write a crapload of data to the drive regularly that even have to consider the NAND lifetime as an issue.You're unnecessarily shortening your SSD's lifespan with continuous writing of SWAP information. Not wise.
It's only people who write a crapload of data to the drive regularly that even have to consider the NAND lifetime as an issue.
I think you accidentally a word out there.![]()
I'm pretty sure it's not . . . and that it will void your warranty the instant you install it. I've got a few more months left on mine - that's one of the reasons I'm holding off.A friend just popped a 256GB SSD (thanks PostmanPot) drive into his 2011 MacBook Pro 13", and has ordered his Apple approved optibay from the Cape Town Apple store, and will be using an external USB powered DVD drive. For him the SSD has been almost a religious experience in how much it has changed his life!!! And I joke not. The best upgrade / money he has ever spent on any computer hardware ever. His MacBook's performance is jaw dropping... in everything... and he is even using Bootcamp Windows. He has said that he would sacrifice his DVD superdrive in an instant for the optibay... would even "lug" around a slim Samsung USB powered external burner... that is just how much value he finds in the SSD with optibay.