alostpacket
Over Macho Grande?
Also Samsung dropped like all their prices a day or two ago. But they still aint cheap heh.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I got an email from Scan, and they've reduced their OCZ Octane down to £113. Good deal I think. SATA 3 ( I think)
Max Read: up to 535MB/s
Max Write: up to 270MB/s
Whereas the Sandisk Extreme 240GB, for £129
550MB/s read speeds and 520MB/s
I know those figures don't necessarily mean much, but I definitely know that the Sandisk offers the right kinds of speeds in the right areas, compared to SSD's that are quite a bit more.
So... Octane vs Extreme....
Edit:
Found this comparison, and it looks like the 4K random ( which I've been told is the most used) is a lot better with the Sandisk.
http://www.maximumpc.com/article/[primary-term]/sandisk_extreme_ssd_240gb_review
But the octane is quite a bit faster in other places. May have to do more research and get that application to analyse which bits are used more.
Also, I need to check the price of a 120gb octane, but i only have 2 sata 6gbps, so if I get 2 SSD's, my hdd will have to go on a 3gbps slot. OK ? Or is it worth getting a pcie adapter thingy
With a serial interface like SATA or SAS you'll need one port per disk.Would have 2 smaller SSD's on a 6gbps slot and then my hdd on a 3gbps be alright?
I could get a pcie adapter so the hdd is on another 6gbps slot.
Also, would 2 SSD's be faster? Cos I thought the bigger ones had better performance...
Before you do, you should know that if you lose data on one drive, the array can quit functioning. RAID0 offers no data protection, only speed. And if it fails, it's much harder to try to recover data from than a single drive.Really? So I should get two smaller SSD's (sandisk 120gb £140) and Lowe the pcie adapter?
Will order soon
Now that I'm doing more and more video transcoding, I could use a really fast "scratch drive" to speed up disk I/O whenever it becomes the bottleneck. Right now my old computers don't challenge my "spinning disk" drives, but if I upgrade to a faster one, it could benefit from the speed of SSD.The biggest files used would be images / videos that I'm editing. Happy for them to be on hdd.
If you're finding that your workflow is disk I/O bound, then having enough SSD capacity to put your work files on SSD while you're editing them will help. If the one smaller SSD doesn't give you enough space to do this, then adding a second one will give you this space. Another benefit of keeping your system and data physical drives separate is that system disk I/O won't slow down your work. It's a small performance increase, but if you're saving money by buying 2 smaller SSD drives, it's a free benefit.Would your last option be better than one big ssd?
Yes. All solid state storage has a much more limited number of read/write cycles than their magnetic counterparts. The microscopic microcircuitry is prone to damage from stuff like cosmic rays, as well as regular use. And the faster the SSD, the more prone to data loss they are.Also... SSD's lose data?
How long should a SSD last?
Also, 2x 120GB SanDisk Extremes are 10 quid more than a single 240GB.
Long enough.
My own X-25M is over 3.5 years-old and Intel's diagnostics show a total of two reallocated sectors, zero media wear. That's a drive that's been in use daily since installed.
It's ultimately your call, but earlier in the thread you mentioned "putting as many games as possible on it". If that's still your plan then one 120GB drive with OS and programs installed to it, and a second devoted to games, would seem an effective solution. Use the 1TB platter drive for transient data and long-term storage.... sorted!