- Aug 25, 2001
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When they replace HDs entirely?
When cost comes down to $1/GB or lower?
When you run apps that demand concurrent I/Os higher than a mechanical HD can sustain (VM usage)?
When they are packaged free in Cracker Jack (tm) boxes?
I'm still on the fence. I have yet to have an SSD blow my socks off. I've installed and used them, and while faster than a regular HD, they're not so fast as to make me immediately swear off using a regular HD.
Another consideration, for me, would be the fact that I'm still on an ICH9R chipset, which is limited to SATA 3G speeds.
Maybe I'll get a Crucial M4 (or one of the next-gen Intel 6G SSDs) when I move to Sandy/Ivy Bridge.
The only thing that I can see that an SSD is good for, is being free of any issues of vibration or shock, compared to a regular HD. That is one positive factual point for SSDs.
Cost is still a big issue to me, as is the apparent unreliability of SSDs. (FAR less reliable than HDs, even 2TB HDs.)
The only current-gen SSDs that I would consider, based mostly on reliability, would be: Crucial M4, Samsung 470, and Intel 320. Even Intel had some problems though, with the 8MB bug (supposedly now fixed). I haven't heard of any showstopping bugs with Crucial or Samsung.
When cost comes down to $1/GB or lower?
When you run apps that demand concurrent I/Os higher than a mechanical HD can sustain (VM usage)?
When they are packaged free in Cracker Jack (tm) boxes?
I'm still on the fence. I have yet to have an SSD blow my socks off. I've installed and used them, and while faster than a regular HD, they're not so fast as to make me immediately swear off using a regular HD.
Another consideration, for me, would be the fact that I'm still on an ICH9R chipset, which is limited to SATA 3G speeds.
Maybe I'll get a Crucial M4 (or one of the next-gen Intel 6G SSDs) when I move to Sandy/Ivy Bridge.
The only thing that I can see that an SSD is good for, is being free of any issues of vibration or shock, compared to a regular HD. That is one positive factual point for SSDs.
Cost is still a big issue to me, as is the apparent unreliability of SSDs. (FAR less reliable than HDs, even 2TB HDs.)
The only current-gen SSDs that I would consider, based mostly on reliability, would be: Crucial M4, Samsung 470, and Intel 320. Even Intel had some problems though, with the 8MB bug (supposedly now fixed). I haven't heard of any showstopping bugs with Crucial or Samsung.
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