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Why do you say that? I have an ageing laptop that I want to speed up with a SSD. Are the SATA 3 drives more reliable?
And when SSDs fail, you can forget about retrieving that data back. No one here caters for that.
I actually did a simple test running two machine side by side containing the same specs booting off a normal disk drive and an SSD, the SSD was only a fraction much quicker and really made no difference.
Never. It makes a massive difference. Its pretty much guaranteed to halve the boot time if not more. You're doing something very wrong...the SSD was only a fraction much quicker and really made no difference.
In my honest opinion SSDs are hyped up as it is.
I'm thinking of a 90GB ... I don't do much on it.
So Windows, MS Office, mail, browser etc will be on it - and maybe Photoshop Elements, Picassa and a few other small programs. 90GB should be enough?
I have 6TB storage on my HP for movies, movies etc
Data recovery is most certainly catered for in terms of SSD, but the success rate is much lower and pricing is many times more expensive.
You testing mechanism is flawed. I recently upgraded a machine which ran off a 2TB 3.5" 5,900 RPM drive, it used to boot into Win 7 and, with Skype loaded and signed in, it was 2min 11sec.
Installing a 60GB cache SSD into that machine (leaving the 2TB in, just adding a cache drive) brought the boot time down to 1min 5 sec, exactly half, after 2 restarts so the cache could learn what was needed.
So that's twice as quick boot time, just installing a cache drive. Pure SSD would be even quicker.
Never. It makes a massive difference. Its pretty much guaranteed to halve the boot time if not more. You're doing something very wrong...
That's because you were using a 5,900 RPM drive... Not a 7200 RPM. Test that first before coming at someone with irrelevant data.
There's not much of a difference.
That's so incredibly fantastic!!!
OMG.... I think I need some champagne to celebrate.
That means you've never owned one and trying to make yourself feel better.
Add ADATA and Transcend to that list, especially in the case of Transcend's SSD720 family. Very fast drives, those.
The 335 series is on sale everywhere I look, although Intel's a popular brand so they get snapped up quickly.
Yes I do feel better now you think it's crap![]()
My word, grow up. Go to a forum that entertains childish idiots like yourself.
Data recovery is most certainly catered for in terms of SSD, but the success rate is much lower and pricing is many times more expensive.
You testing mechanism is flawed. I recently upgraded a machine which ran off a 2TB 3.5" 5,900 RPM drive, it used to boot into Win 7 and, with Skype loaded and signed in, it was 2min 11sec.
Installing a 60GB cache SSD into that machine (leaving the 2TB in, just adding a cache drive) brought the boot time down to 1min 5 sec, exactly half, after 2 restarts so the cache could learn what was needed.
So that's twice as quick boot time, just installing a cache drive. Pure SSD would be even quicker.
I've probably used more SSDs then fingers on your hands son.
You probably have only one and now you trying to make the world of it.
How pathetic.
That's so amazingly significant.
Because we all work on 386's right? Who needs more speed out of their PC's?Cold Boot
Results:
HDD: 70s
SSD: 41s
Restart and Warm Boot
Results:
HDD: 77s
SSD: 53s
Software Load Tests
Load AutoCAD Mechanical 2012 up to when the Exchange window pops up.
Results:
HDD: 49s
SSD: 14s
Load 3D Studio Max 2012 up to when the welcome window pops up.
Results:
HDD: 50s
SSD: 15s
I haven't seen the Intel SSD drives for sale in South Africa yet.
Did Intel decide to hate Africa again?