SSD's When will they be standard

If these conferences weren't all out of state and out of my service area, I probably could make a killing upgrading them all to ssd's.
It might be worth crunching the numbers on that. If you can arrange to upgrade even two or three in one trip, it might be a decent gig.

I have a cluster of eight (residential) customers way outside my normal operating range. I visit about once every eight to ten weeks and do three or four jobs, splitting the travel cost between them. It's a worthwhile run out for a few hours planned work, with free lunch, and sometimes includes an hour's worth of 'training' -- a group session just discussing whatever computer stuff they want to talk about and answering general IT questions.
 
One of the MAIN reasons companies like HP and Dell don't want SSD's to become standard is they want to differentiate between their premium $800+ machines and their shoddy $300 machines. Because, let's face it. What gives their premium machines the speed is NOT the i7 vs the i3 processor, nor is it the 12GB of RAM vs the 4GB. It's the SSD's. For the average person, they'd see absolutely no difference between these two systems:

System #1:
Intel Core i3 Dual Core
4GB DDR3
120GB SSD

System #2:
Intel Core i7 Quad Core
16GB DDR4
250GB SSD

Startup time would be nearly identical. Microsoft Office would start in about the same time (1.5 seconds). Microsoft Edge would be just as fast too. And Yahoo would have just as many ads on their email page slowing down the loading of emails.

Now I'm not saying there is no difference between the above systems. I would notice a HUGE difference with the work I do (gaming, Photoshop, video editing, having 100+ tabs and windows open, etc.). But I am NOT the typical consumer. The market just isn't big enough to target just people like me.

Also, I believe HP and Dell are concerned that people won't replace their computers as often if they have SSD's in them. The main reason why people replace their computers is either their old one completely dies, or it's so slow they can't handle it anymore. It won't get so slow with SSD's in the future. The days of people downloading everything under the sun from Download.com and getting HUNDREDS of BS startup applications are long gone. People these days are (rightfully) TERRIFIED to download anything onto their computer, because they don't understand that you need to uncheck all those BS boxes to avoid getting crapware with your install. Super fast SSD + little to no crapware = you always have a fast computer and don't need to replace it until it blows up in your face. This terrifies both OEM's like HP and Dell, and me because it will reduce my work. I say, let them keep the HDD's as long as possible. It will ensure that I'll have continuous work.
 
Also they get to sell the product twice when people upgrade

Furthermore there’s billions of dollars invested in factories and infrastructure
Possibly millions of people employed making conventional drives.

The spinning HD companies are buying up SSD companies
 
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I just replaced a 2 TB HD with a 1 TB HD computer was only a few months old from Worst Buy

They were not overly happy about getting a 1TB despite having less than 1 gig of data and that was email
 
Any hard drive replacement is an up sell to a SSD. The difference is night and day and the clients love it. Just upgraded to a Samsung 850 EVO for an office this past weekend. They let me know the speed difference is incredible for them.

System is i3, with 8GB RAM.
 
I never thought of it from the angle that SSD's becoming standard would hurt my shop because people won't be complaining there pc is slow as often, but that is very interesting to think of it that way.
 
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