- Feb 25, 2004
- 21,758
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Just a mini-rant here.
So I'm doing another sidegrade (that is apparently what I do these days) and I have a SSD accelerated 1TB drive that mostly has steam games and VMs on it. I'm running an asrock z77 motherboard. I removed my i5-3570 because I intend to use it for testing something else and installed a celeron G530 just so I could use the PC in the mean time.
Now I can't even access the 1TB drive. If you go into the Intel whatever they call hard drive settings thing the accelerate tab is gone and the SSD and drive are listed as "incompatible". Apparently, not only do you require a specific chipset, but smart response only works if you also have a Core cpu. Because the chipset thing wasn't arbitrary enough for running a piece of software, Intel needed to double upsell.
That's annoying, but I just want the disk to turn back into regular drive...who cares about the SSD caching in this temporary configuration? The only options I have in the CTRL+I utility at boot and the Intel application basically say they will destroy all data. Thanks Intel for just making things hard for no reason. You blocked me even turning it off in your zeal for more cash.
If I boot up into linux, the data is all there so I'm fine (and it wasn't really valuable data either) but this is fairly ridiculous.
Anyway, I think I'm done with the caching thing going forward. Its a good idea but all the arbitrary requirements suck all point out of it and it adds complexity. Only 64GB? Really? Chipset and CPU requirements? I guess should be happy you don't have to install a Intel branded SSD just to get it to work, that certainly seems like something they would do. And SSDs are so cheap now it doesn't really seem worth the effort. I'll just buy a bigger one and reduce my CPU budget to compensate.
So I'm doing another sidegrade (that is apparently what I do these days) and I have a SSD accelerated 1TB drive that mostly has steam games and VMs on it. I'm running an asrock z77 motherboard. I removed my i5-3570 because I intend to use it for testing something else and installed a celeron G530 just so I could use the PC in the mean time.
Now I can't even access the 1TB drive. If you go into the Intel whatever they call hard drive settings thing the accelerate tab is gone and the SSD and drive are listed as "incompatible". Apparently, not only do you require a specific chipset, but smart response only works if you also have a Core cpu. Because the chipset thing wasn't arbitrary enough for running a piece of software, Intel needed to double upsell.
That's annoying, but I just want the disk to turn back into regular drive...who cares about the SSD caching in this temporary configuration? The only options I have in the CTRL+I utility at boot and the Intel application basically say they will destroy all data. Thanks Intel for just making things hard for no reason. You blocked me even turning it off in your zeal for more cash.
If I boot up into linux, the data is all there so I'm fine (and it wasn't really valuable data either) but this is fairly ridiculous.
Anyway, I think I'm done with the caching thing going forward. Its a good idea but all the arbitrary requirements suck all point out of it and it adds complexity. Only 64GB? Really? Chipset and CPU requirements? I guess should be happy you don't have to install a Intel branded SSD just to get it to work, that certainly seems like something they would do. And SSDs are so cheap now it doesn't really seem worth the effort. I'll just buy a bigger one and reduce my CPU budget to compensate.