You can expect them to be back. Sometimes saving a few bucks in the short term isn't a good investment.Thanks, snagged a couple for customer builds.
You can expect them to be back. Sometimes saving a few bucks in the short term isn't a good investment.
You've answered your own question... use Kingston.Then what SSDs would you recommend? Samsung, the ones with firmware problems that slow down your drive due to stale data, or brick your drive due to bad firmware updates?
Contrast that to a Kingston V300 that I've had in continuous service, for nearly several years now, without a problem.
Be sure to tell your customers that because when these Mushkins die they'll be needing their backups. The only thing is that their failure will not be unexpected because I'm telling you now that they will fail and your customers will complain.The only certain thing is, most storage devices will die, when you least expect them to. And it doesn't matter how much you pay for them. Always have backups of your most important data, and then you won't have to worry.
You've answered your own question... use Kingston.Be sure to tell your customers that because when these Mushkins die they'll be needing their backups. The only thing is that their failure will not be unexpected because I'm telling you now that they will fail and your customers will complain.
Sometimes saving a few bucks in the short term isn't a good investment.
You've answered your own question... use Kingston.
Put me down as a troll but please remember this thread when those Mushkins go mushy.
Some people refuse to see the facts even when they hit them slap in the face. Given the fact that there are 35% of reviews that are 1 or 2 stars for the 120GB Mushkin SSD compared to 20% for the 120GB Kingston V300 SSD, there will be those people who will insist that this means nothing. In the absence of any other evidence they will disregard the only evidence they have and are likely to get. It is my belief that, even if the numbers are not entirely representative of the purchasers (and I would disagree with that), where there's smoke there's fire.I still would like to know why you feel Mushkin SandForce-based SSDs are any less reliable than any other SandForce-based SSD? There must be a reason.
Some people refuse to see the facts even when they hit them slap in the face. Given the fact that there are 35% of reviews that are 1 or 2 stars for the 120GB Mushkin SSD compared to 20% for the 120GB Kingston V300 SSD, there will be those people who will insist that this means nothing. In the absence of any other evidence they will disregard the only evidence they have and are likely to get. It is my belief that, even if the numbers are not entirely representative of the purchasers (and I would disagree with that), where there's smoke there's fire.
Several years ago I had the misfortune to order a pair of Mushkin Redline memory sticks. They did not work. After several round trips over multiple months I attempted to get a pair that worked. I eventually succeeded but I sold them asap because I had had enough of them. During the debacle I came to the realization that Mushkin was not testing their memory. They were actually using their customer base to test their products. Looking at the reviews for Mushkin products today, I believe they are still doing that.
The side effect with trying to explain why you believe something is that there are people who will insist that what you believe is wrong. Personally I'm not interested in having my opinions/beliefs challenged by anything less than arguments backed by facts and figures.
Some people refuse to see the facts even when they hit them slap in the face. Given the fact that there are 35% of reviews that are 1 or 2 stars for the 120GB Mushkin SSD compared to 20% for the 120GB Kingston V300 SSD, there will be those people who will insist that this means nothing.