So you have a 40Gb ssd sam. And you say the difference is night and day. How would you say it handles multiple i/o operations? I'm not sure whats going on with my second velociraptor now. I'm hoping it's the sata cable. At the very least, I'll reseat it tonight, when I open up both of my cases for routine blowout, and insertion of a new drive. I've been experiencing brief lockups. Generally only with firefox. But I find it very curious because, when the lockup ceases, I hear the harddrive begin working again. Like something was holding it back. Sometimes when I'm typing, the system isn't keeping up. But then it is, and I hear the drive begin to work again. Weird stuff.... I'd like to get an SSD. 40Gb isn't gonna cut it though I'm currently selling stuff on ebay, so I can make this upgrade. What would be the best drive I could get for ~200 USD, and have at least 100Gb of space? All opinions welcome of course
Oman7, This is as close as you can get for $200. It's 90GB can't do a 100GB for under $200 at the moment. Not in as fast a drive http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820227611 There's also one from Corsair, but it's MTBF is only half that of the 2,000,000 hours of the OCZ! http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820233149 Russ
IOPs are tenfold better than mechanical drives. I'm avoiding recommending OCZs now due to the failure rates. RMAs are about 1% for Intels, around 5-6% and lots of them are failing mid-term around the 6 month period. Not ideal.
It probably is, in fairness, as the corsairs, G-Skills etc. also got similarly poor scores. Note that on newegg most SSDs get 4 eggs, the Intels get 5.
I have a feeling that this one is what I'm gonna land with. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820167035 Hopefully, the order won't get mucked up this time LOL! Last time, they sent me a 1.8" drive!
Oman7, Check this one out then. Same 5 eggs as the Intel! http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820227601 800,000 more hours in MTBF! Better overall rating from newegg too! No 2.5" to 3.5" adapter though! $189 Russ
Mmm hmm, not too bad at all russ. I'm strongly gonna consider that one. Much faster write rate. 2 of those in Raid 0 would be phenomenal! (On the sata 6.0Gb port of course...
I've been using a mere 70gb of my Veloci for a few months now. Perhaps 90Gb will suffice for now. Until I can buy another, and then raid them. Or maybe not even raid, just use it for program/game installs and such
Yeah the OCZs are much faster drives than the Intels, though you will never notice this difference in the real world.
LOL! Well...I definitely like knowing that the throughput is very good if not the best. In a month or two, when I'm ready to buy one, reviews and pricing should speak for themselves
My 30GB Vertex was too small for a Hackintosh partition so i just reinstalled everything to a WD10EADS. It was painful having to revert to mechanical drive for an OS. The feel of Snow Leopard with that drive is nearly as good (except for boot) as that 1st generation Vertex, and now i have an old SSD as scratch disk for my attempts at self-taught audio/video editing.
Think it's worth it eh? You're probably right. They are due for another release. 25nm? Wow, that's getting pretty friggin small! Impressive stuff.
Oman7, Look at it this way. Even if the price is way up there, the price of the Vertex2's will come down! LOL!! Russ
A little Cinebench-based CPU benchmark of how Sandy Bridge stacks up against Bloomfield and AMD's latest hex-core. A few (but not a complete set of) overclocking results mixed in there too. AMD Athlon II X6 1100T: Per-core: 1000 Total: 6000 Core i5 2500K: Per-core: 1380 Total: 5520 Core i7 875K: Per-core: 1410 Total: 5640 Core i5 655K: Per-core: 1435 Total: 2870 Core i7 980X: Per-core: 1510 Total: 9060 Core i7 920->3.6Ghz: Per-core: 1585 Total: 6340 Core i5 2500K->4.3Ghz: Per-core: 1735 Total: 6940 Core i7 2600K: Per-core: 1750 Total: 7000 Core i7 980X->4.4Ghz: Per-core: 1900 Total: 11,400 Core i7 2600K->4.4Ghz: Per-core: 2190 Total: 8760 An overclocked i7 980X manages a 90% gain over the X6 1100T at stock. An impressive result, but OC vs. OC it'll likely be more like 60%, which ain't much for a 270% price markup Still, as best of the best without a budget goes, the 980X is totally without compare, for now. Interestingly, the i5 2500K, which does not contain any of the i7 enhancements for multimedia benches, comes quite close to the X6, and is actually $45 cheaper. It will also overclock considerably more than the AMD hex. The older LGA1156 i7s fare fairly well here as they do have hyper-threading, which allows the once quite pricey 875 to come at 94% of the X6 at stock. A small overclock, plus all the benefits of a true LGA1366 i7 allow the 920 at 3.6Ghz to surpass the X6. The i7 2600K is an absolute monster of a quad. Stock it's 17% beyond the X6 1100T, and when overclocked reaches a massive 46% advantage. At a very reasonable $330, it's by far the best CPU for workstations right now. 5Ghz overclocks are far from unheard of, with 4.7-4.8Ghz on the beefed up (albeit extremely loud) stock cooler it's provided with,