โMay-05-2014 09:12 AM
โMay-12-2014 05:14 PM
โMay-09-2014 01:55 PM
โMay-09-2014 01:07 PM
โMay-09-2014 12:47 PM
โMay-09-2014 11:23 AM
โMay-09-2014 10:10 AM
strollin wrote:mlts22 wrote:
... What I might look into as a drive upgrade on a laptop is the WD Black2, which is a 1TB HDD and a 120 GB SSD, both in one physical unit. This way, the OS and critical applications can go on the SSD, while everything else winds up on the HDD.
I was looking into one of these as well since it sounds intriguing. However, after some reading, I've pretty much decided against it. The ssd part of it is just an average performer (decent read times, slow writes) and the hdd part of it is only a 5400rpm drive. There is only 1 SATA connector that the 2 sides share and the machine will only "see" the ssd until some proprietary WD software is loaded to enable access to the hdd side. Because the 2 sides share a single SATA interface, performance suffers if the machine is attempting to access the ssd and the hdd at the same time.
For slightly more money, I've pretty much decided to go with a Samsung EVO 500G ssd instead. I don't really need 1TB+ of storage in my laptop, 500G is plenty and the Samsung will provide higher performance than the WD hybrid.
โMay-09-2014 09:47 AM
mlts22 wrote:
... What I might look into as a drive upgrade on a laptop is the WD Black2, which is a 1TB HDD and a 120 GB SSD, both in one physical unit. This way, the OS and critical applications can go on the SSD, while everything else winds up on the HDD.
โMay-08-2014 08:10 AM
โMay-07-2014 09:48 AM
mileshuff wrote:
What is the life expectancy of a heavily used SSD compared with a quality conventional drive? A low end consumer grade platter drive seems to last 2-4 years for me, usually the bearing goes out. A high end server class platter drive rarely has failed after 5+ years of heavy use. What about SSD's, such as R/W cycle life expectancy etc?
โMay-07-2014 09:16 AM
strollin wrote:MrWizard wrote:
SSD is basically Erom memory , just like a u s b stick Flash drive
But the basic principles are the same:
Apply a charge write the data, data stays until you deliberately change it.
Do you mean EPROM? (from what I know, EROM is an older term for EPROM). EPROMs can't be erased on a cell by cell basis, the whole thing is erased at once (requires exposure to UV light).
โMay-07-2014 08:53 AM
MrWizard wrote:
SSD is basically Erom memory , just like a u s b stick Flash drive
Ok there are electrical difference between old style Erom and newer Flash
But the basic principles are the same
Apply a charge write the data, data stays until you deliberately change it
Failure time is like the RAM in your pc, it lasts a lot longer than the mechanical hard drive, there is no physical wear, the only contributing factors are voltage and Heat, keep it cool, it will last longer than you care to keep it
โMay-07-2014 06:24 AM
โMay-07-2014 04:27 AM
RVcrazy wrote:
What ratio of SSD to regular storage would you suggest? We want to be able to store our pictures & various word & excel documents. We are thinking that we don't need the top of the line like we are used to, but maybe we are wrong... Thanks!
โMay-06-2014 10:24 PM