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-   -   Anyone use solid-state drive instead of hard disk drive? (https://www.rc-monster.com/forum/showthread.php?t=27099)

simplechamp 05.27.2010 12:58 PM

Anyone use solid-state drive instead of hard disk drive?
 
I just put a 160GB Intel X-25 solid-state drive into my netbook and it is excellent. The SSD is significantly faster as far as boot times, read/write, etc. and I now have the piece of mind that there are no moving parts inside the drive that will fail. The number one downside is price, to replace the 160GB HDD the equivalent SSD cost more than my netbook altogether. But I think it is worth it, can't really put a price on all that data, and avoiding the headaches of dealing with a drive crash (if you've ever had it happen you'll know what I mean).

BrianG 05.27.2010 01:09 PM

The other downside is that like all similar media (SD, CF, USB sticks, etc), they have a limited number of write cycles before they start developing errors (~100k IIRC). There is usually some type of firmware on the device which attempts to evenly use all the data bits - as a result defragmenting is completely useless.

Nard Cox 05.27.2010 01:14 PM

Correct Brian, they have a limited number of write cycles. That's why I never recommend using a USB stick as additional working memory.

I was a real PC nerd a few (2 a 3) years back (before the RC virus struck) and SSD was WAY to expensive back then. I still think it is now so I have no experience with SSD in my PC or notebook. Oh well, early adapters always pay the jackpot.

But glad you like it. I've seen some comparison video's on YT concerning performance gain in booting, decoding etc pretty impressive :)

reno911 05.27.2010 01:15 PM

I thought about looking into an external SSD for back up purposes, but I went with the larger less expensive HDD.

I back up everything on a separate drive using Apples time machine. I think it is the coolest new feature to their os. I can go back and see what I have done if I made a mistake and or deleted something I didn't want to.

The drive I have is wireless so my wife's macbook can access it too, mostly used for storage of our media and documents, it has a secondary purpose of a shared hardrive. As well as being a TB in size, we'll never see the day it gets full.

Nard Cox 05.27.2010 01:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by reno911 (Post 367076)
As well as being a TB in size, we'll never see the day it gets full.

15 years (rough guess) ago we thought we would never need a 12MB drive :lol:

As for back-up I would prefer a HDD. The space/$ is sooo much better than SSD that I don't see how to ''defend'' buying a SSD unless you have a pool build of diamants and filled with liquid gold.

zeropointbug 05.27.2010 01:39 PM

Yeah, the latest SSD's are extremely fast, they really do live up to their reputation and ratings. My friend has one, a cheaper one, Kingston SSD NOW 60GB IIRC, one of the slowest, but damn, leaves a HDD in the dust.

I can't remember for the life of me, the firmware type, some acronym... anyways, it reads and writes in an intelligent way that drastically increases useful cycles available from the device.

Personally I would wait another year or two before jumping in, they are getting better at such a fast pace right now, by the time it arrived at your door beign shipped, a new one will be available that is faster, last longer, and less expensive.

zeropointbug 05.27.2010 01:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nard Cox (Post 367078)
15 years (rough guess) ago we thought we would never need a 12MB drive :lol:

As for back-up I would prefer a HDD. The space/$ is sooo much better than SSD that I don't see how to ''defend'' buying a SSD unless you have a pool build of diamants and filled with liquid gold.



Don't you mean 25 years ago? 15 years ago I had a 4GB HDD in with a Pentium 166mhz 32mb ram PC, beat that. :mdr:

BrianG 05.27.2010 01:45 PM

I just did a little more research and apparently, the life cycle is up to around 1,000,000 write cycles now. Oh, and ZPB, the term you are looking for is "wear leveling".

reno911 05.27.2010 01:51 PM

c:\dir

Now that was how it was done!

I wish I remember the string for Doom!

whitrzac 05.27.2010 02:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zeropointbug (Post 367081)
Don't you mean 25 years ago? 15 years ago I had a 4GB HDD in with a Pentium 166mhz 32mb ram PC, beat that. :mdr:

IBM commodore FTW:rofl:


I miss my turbo button:whistle:

bdebde 05.27.2010 03:08 PM

I have a Corsair P128 in my desktop machine for system drive, and a 640 GB HD for my stuff. Windows 7 boots super fast, programs open instantly. Been running it for nearly 6 months with no drop in performance, drive supports trim with win7.

bdebde 05.27.2010 03:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zeropointbug (Post 367081)
Don't you mean 25 years ago? 15 years ago I had a 4GB HDD in with a Pentium 166mhz 32mb ram PC, beat that. :mdr:

Somewhere I have a 52 mb HD with a $499 price tag on it (ouch).

reno911 05.27.2010 04:56 PM

I can see these taking over as soon as they have the same storage capacity as HDD.

lucias 05.27.2010 06:12 PM

I am running 2 X25 40GB in a Raid 0 in my home PC.. They do write a lot faster depending on what you are doing and of course no noise. It was cool from the black loading screen in windows 7 to be able to click on the start button took 11 minutes to install and be able to start loading drivers..

lucias 05.27.2010 06:13 PM

Here is a good review..

http://www.anandtech.com/show/3618/i...25m-g2-for-250


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