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Solid State hard drive - IDE?!!


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Posted

Here's the scenario... Your boss wants you to go out and buy the latest in solid state hardware storage... Ooh perfect the new Samung 32Gb Solid state hard drive.. perfect.

 

... except for one little problem... It's an IDE drive.

 

Am I the only one wondering which planet the numpty who came up with this is on?!

 

I mean, you're only going to want this if you have some serious cash and chances are if you have a lot of cash you've also already got a laptop that has a SATA connector, not IDE?

Posted
I found this site a little while back when i was investigating/learning about solid state http://www.offtek.co.uk/ssd25.php?subcat=99 there alot cheaper than overclockers uk (last time i checked) there a little slower on writing, but quick on the reading. some guy on overclockers uk wrote a review saying he has two of these bad boys on raid 0 lol and boot times are mega fast.
Posted

Isn't it interesting that they're only producing these things as 2.5" drives though?

 

I guess it means you can always fit more than one in a standard PC as well as a laptop though..

 

Wonder what the optimum usage would be for one of these... move the swap file to a standard HD and keep the OS on this thing?

Posted
dont think you would need to move the swap file imo. I have hunted high and low to find performance data on these. Heat was something I wondered about.
Posted
The only reason I suggested moving the swap was because I'd heard there was a limit to the amount of read/write activity these things can handle before they croak... Something to consider or am I confusing this with something else?
Posted
The only reason I suggested moving the swap was because I'd heard there was a limit to the amount of read/write activity these things can handle before they croak... Something to consider or am I confusing this with something else?

 

croak? are we talking about buffers. I have not heard of this but again I would be intrested to know more. where did you hear this?

 

Im really keen as im thinking about buying 2 when i build my next system in the new year.

Posted
Limited write cycles. Typical Flash storage will typically wear out after 100,000-300,000 write cycles, while high endurance Flash storage is often marketed with endurance of 1–5 million write cycles (many log files, file allocation tables, and other commonly used parts of the file system exceed this over the lifetime of a computer). Special file systems or firmware designs can mitigate this problem by spreading writes over the entire device, rather than rewriting files in place.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_state_drive#Disadvantages

Posted

The only real advantage atm is the fact that if you drop one it's more likely to still be working... speed, price and storage capacity are all lacking.

 

(I'm still jealous you get to play with one!)

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