anyone have one?
Published on August 13, 2010 By MadDeez In Personal Computing

I'm seriously considering buying one of these. Anyone out there have one? If yes, what are your impressions and are you happy with it?


Comments (Page 3)
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on Sep 07, 2010

i got the drive but i don't have any use for the pagefile or hibernation bit. those two features of win7 are disabled. if i do decide to use a pagefile, i'll set it up on a wd black drive instead of the ssd. so far, i'm very happy with my ssd. so much so i may get a 128 or 256 ssd as an xmas gift to myself. if i do, it'll have a sandforce controller unless the 128 nova is available at a killer price.

on Sep 07, 2010

but i don't have any use for the pagefile or hibernation bit. those two features of win7 are disabled. if i do decide to use a pagefile, i'll set it up on a wd black drive instead of the ssd.

Looking into pagefile use and ideal location and you'll find no matter how much ram you have the OS will still 'want' a pagefile...and it's in the root of the OS drive because that's the proper/best place for it.  Disabling and/or moving it won't help your system's function or 'speed'.

but Jafo why the need to hibernate?

My UPS requires it so it can handle controlled shutdowns on blackout....

on Sep 07, 2010

My UPS requires it so it can handle controlled shutdowns on blackout....

Been dancing all around getting one of those for years now. Is it that much of a help?

 

on Sep 07, 2010

Been dancing all around getting one of those for years now. Is it that much of a help?

Protects you from spikes.....and WHEN you are in the midst of doing something 'important' and your power goes out....you have a few minutes to sort it out and save what you're doing.

Might not happen often....but once is enough to justify its use. [happened to me more than once]...

on Sep 07, 2010

Been googling and I just can't afford an SSD right now. I would need at least a 128GB minimum for 7, 256 gb preferable. Vista would be ok with it's old drive, since I mainly only test on it.

 

Also, it seems most SSDs are 2.5.  Why is that? 3.5 is what fits my bays.

on Sep 07, 2010


but i don't have any use for the pagefile or hibernation bit. those two features of win7 are disabled. if i do decide to use a pagefile, i'll set it up on a wd black drive instead of the ssd.
Looking into pagefile use and ideal location and you'll find no matter how much ram you have the OS will still 'want' a pagefile...and it's in the root of the OS drive because that's the proper/best place for it.  Disabling and/or moving it won't help your system's function or 'speed'.


but Jafo why the need to hibernate?
My UPS requires it so it can handle controlled shutdowns on blackout....
Indeed the performance isnt a issue, my issue with pagefile is wear, since it is constantly writing to the drive.

 

Yeah my UPS just shut's down my system rather than hibernates.

on Sep 08, 2010

RedneckDude

My UPS requires it so it can handle controlled shutdowns on blackout....

Been dancing all around getting one of those for years now. Is it that much of a help?
 

Like Jafo, saved my bacon more than once! Imagine having a ton of projects open at the same time, which you haven't saved yet for some reason, and the power goes out... Or you are in the middle of a critical BIOS update and the power goes out... or the cleaning lady decides to plug one too many appliances and blows the fuse box. If you're in a rural area with lots of power spikes and brownouts, they're also great to protect your equipment and keep it running smoothly.

It's kind of like an insurance: most of the time an UPS sits there doing nothing, but then, if something happens, you are really glad you have one.

If you decide to get one, go APC, they're the best for UPSs.

on Sep 08, 2010

RedneckDude
Also, it seems most SSDs are 2.5.  Why is that? 3.5 is what fits my bays.

They're just a PCB with a bunch of chips, so minimum size is not really an issue. Also, laptops use 2.5 hard disks, therefore they can be used on both desktops and laptops.

As far as I know, they also come with 2.5 to 3.5 adapters. At least the Intels did.

on Sep 08, 2010

or the cleaning lady decides to plug one too many appliances and blows the fuse box.

As if I had a cleaning lady.

 

Thanks, Jorge.

on Sep 08, 2010

Also, it seems most SSDs are 2.5. Why is that? 3.5 is what fits my bays.

Form-factor to suit laptop drives...

on Sep 08, 2010

RAID0 sucks when you throw a drive though, been there dont that with hdd's.

all a matter of your setup.  I use raid 0 but backup my data regularly, so if a drive blows out, then that's that.  Obviously, without a good backup strategy, there is risk (even if you aren't using raid 0).  But yeah, always sucks to lose a drive.

 

on Sep 08, 2010


Also, it seems most SSDs are 2.5. Why is that? 3.5 is what fits my bays.


Form-factor to suit laptop drives...

Right, but it will work in a desktop? Good to know, because there seems to be more of them than 3.5s.

on Sep 08, 2010

OMG_pacov
RAID0 sucks when you throw a drive though, been there dont that with hdd's.


all a matter of your setup.  I use raid 0 but backup my data regularly, so if a drive blows out, then that's that.  Obviously, without a good backup strategy, there is risk (even if you aren't using raid 0).  But yeah, always sucks to lose a drive.

Unlike hard disk drives, SSDs have no moving parts, just electronics, so they should be an order of magnitude more reliable. Of course, FLASH memory does have one MAJOR drawback: it can only be written to so many times (which is why the controller and algorithms used in an SSD are so important, as they spread write operations, minimizing the number of times a single flash cell is written to during the life of the drive).

On the other hand, from what I read and unlike a hard disk, a SSD at the end of its life will not become inaccessible, causing you to lose data: instead, the data in it will just become read-only.

Either way, as so many people have found out the hard way, regular (automated if possible) full backups are a must. Otherwise it's not a question of IF you lose data, but WHEN. And with the price of external 1 TB hard disk drives being so low, there is no excuse not to backup your data (you can even automate backups and make mirror images of your hard disk(s), so you can be up and running again in the minimum amount of time, using software like Acronis True Image).

Here backups are automatically made to two external hard disk drives in alternate fashion, keeping multiple versions up to 3 months old around, and, once a week, critical data is backed up to an offsite location via FTP. All without me having to worry about a thing (except verify from time to time that backups are indeed being performed as they should).

on Sep 08, 2010

I have a 256 GB Crucial SSD and I'm quite pleased with it. If you want some sick speeds from your SSD drives, it's better to get several smaller ones (40-60 GB) and merge them in the RAID field. This is where they truly shine. OFC with the number of disks in the RAID increases chance of disk failure and losing ALL the date in those disks. You have some silly extreme tests of it in youtube : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96dWOEa4Djs

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