ok so im looking at ordering an ssd, installing it for my os and programs and keeping all of my music on my existing 500gb in an caddy in place of my dvd. from searching similar threads i understand that i wont really see any improvement in read times for the music but will the ssd improve system stability, have any of you noticeed any improvements?
without sounding dumb could you elaborate i’m running windows, i know the bootup time is immensely better but will the laptop be any more stable, as thats what im after more so than speed really.
i bought an intel SSd over summer 120gb, off newegg, its great for programs.
ive been running it on my Asus (then dell ) laptops ever since. you all missed the black friday sale $1/gb
By stable do you mean like more sturdy and less likely to break and such? Because if so then yes as the SSD has no moving parts as opposed to a hard drive then it is a lot more stable.
Exactly what I got! And I picked it up on Black Friday
Anyhow… stability wont really improve imo. Resume from sleep is almost instant though and that makes your laptop much more convenient.
That being said… doing a clean install of your os with only necessary drivers and minimal proggies will improve your stability. A SSD is not necessary to do these things but its a damn good excuse
I’m an IT guy by trade, and I justified buying 2 Crucial M4’s, 2 Sandisk 120gig SSD’s, and 2 Kingston SSD’s ("Investigating methods to mitigate the performance impact of portable device encryption
I maxed the memory (8gb) and threw XP and 7 builds on the Crucial and Sandisk drives, and have been running some benchmarking utilities to get some legit results. Using Novabench, CrystalDiskMark, and DiskBench (along with a few others), and the difference between the SSD’s and a plain SATA are INSANE
Test : 1000 MB [C: 73.4% (87.5/119.1 GB)] (x5)
Date : 2011/12/01 9:09:23
OS : Windows 7 Ultimate Edition [6.1 Build 7600] (x64)
I can’t find my SATA results for CDB at the moment, but they were all ~5-15mb\sec throughput vs. ~200 or so on average for the SSDs.
And in actual usage I’ll say that across the board every single operation is significantly faster than with a SATA drive. I don’t see myself ever going back to a traditional disk for my OS.
One other thing to note, a lot of laptops don’t have SATA controllers that will run any faster than SATAII, and on those machines the faster SATAIII drives like the Crucial aren’t any faster than the cheaper SATAII drives. That means that ~$120 Sandisk drive will have the same impact as the ~$180-200 Crucial drive.
I’m using a OCZ 128Go SSD.
I’m not disapointed at all, I got Windows 7, Battlefield 3, FL Studio and basic stuff that i use often (like firefox etc), and it’s just awesome how fast it is.
ok so ive got the money for an ssd now but not as much as id expected as always other things to pay out, and i broke my headphones last night!! would a 64gb be enough for just win 7 64bit, traktor, chrome and itunes??