Galdorf
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 501
- Location
- Ontario, Canada
a good resource explaining SSD and the different types
Nice find, thanks!
For most end users, I am still not sold on SSD. The increase in speed is not noticeable, and how many people actually make an effort not to use all the space? It does make it easier to sell backup service though. Since they crash with no warning, it makes it hard to know when the EOL is. With mechanical, most of the time you do get nice warnings that things are about to go to crap. Different noises, read write errors. Etc. Maybe my own preferences have kept me from recommending this change to my customers.
Nice find, thanks!
For most end users, I am still not sold on SSD. The increase in speed is not noticeable, and how many people actually make an effort not to use all the space? It does make it easier to sell backup service though. Since they crash with no warning, it makes it hard to know when the EOL is. With mechanical, most of the time you do get nice warnings that things are about to go to crap. Different noises, read write errors. Etc. Maybe my own preferences have kept me from recommending this change to my customers.
Nice find, thanks!
For most end users, I am still not sold on SSD. The increase in speed is not noticeable, .
An SSD compared to a HDD is the most noticeable speed upgrade that you can do on a computer. It not only improves boot times and program startup times four-fold, but all interactive computer use is also sped up. The only computer usage that isn't helped by an SSD is CPU or GPU intensive tasks which ordinary users hardly ever do. So almost all ordinary usage benefits a lot from SSD, and clients tell me this every time I upgrade them. They definitely notice.The increase in speed is not noticeable
Doesn't matter. Modern SSDs already keep reserved space for internal use, ever wondered why mainstream SSDs have odd sizes like 240GB?how many people actually make an effort not to use all the space?
But if the EOL is longer than a HDD then surely that's a good thing? Yes it's true we recover data from failing HDDs all the time so isn't everyone lucky... or put another way, why are these HDDs failures so common? And HDDs can also fail suddenly, in my workshop we see more sudden HDD failures than SSD failures, plus we get all the 'my computer has been slow for months' HDD failures too. Very few SSD failures at all.they crash with no warning, it makes it hard to know when the EOL is
Yes I think you need to try one in your own computer.Maybe my own preferences have kept me from recommending this change to my customers.
The increase in speed is not noticeable
We only sell SSDs. Only time I get normal HDDs is for a NAS.