There is absolutely no benefit at all in having the programs on a separate SSD.
I'm not sure why some people in this thread have been confused by the question.
Is there any reason why you specify one partition? If I remember correctly, installing programs into the system/C drive results in UAC virtualizing certain things (eg. a game's .ini file might end up in a virtualstore directory), which is a royal pain in the arse.
Lemme see a minute . . . I bought my first SSD in 2011 for use in SSD caching with HDD acceleration. It served its purpose.
More recently, people seem to worry about how many writes they can make to an SSD before it starts going south. So obviously folks deployed their SSDs of limited size to store the OS primarily, perhaps programs and even games second. Where you draw the line of demarcation is still a matter of choice.
You might compare the power-consumption for a single 1TB HDD running 24/7 for a year against an SSD. Will the savings even come close to accounting for the price difference between the two? Not very likely. You're satisfying your "need for speed" with the SSD purchase, even for the miniscule power-consumption it represents.
I wouldn't use an SSD to store DVR-captures or movies, large data files or any data files for that matter. Maybe in the future -- not now. HDDs serve a purpose for the time being.
I'm kind of wondering that people automatically think if you have an SSD in your rig, you have to have a HDD for files because of the higher cost/GB ratio may preclude a big enough SSD for all-on-one. Now that SSDs are easily at .50/GB or less and larger capacity is commonplace... we will see more and more SSD-only machines. I know, I just built one... and it's weird not having to manage 2 or more drives... but I'll bet I get over it. :biggrin:
noEDIT: This question has nothing to do with mechanical HDDs. I'm not going to be using any HDDs in this system.
When working with fast SSDs, is there still any perceivable benefit to having the OS on a separate drive to programs/games?
Edit: My experience, is that SSD wearout is way overstated in FUD articles, detailing all these little tricks to extend the lifespan of your SSD, while at the same time, taking some of the most performance-sensitive functions of the PC off of the SSD and onto a HDD. Quite frankly, you bought the SSD for speed, use it for that to the max! You'll be upgrading it long before it wears out. (Unless you're running a DB server on it.)
That depends on how much space ones needs, doesn't it?
