Intel
"Intel's SSDs came out best, with just 0.59 percent failure rates."
http://www.pcworld.com/businesscent...te_no_better_than_traditional_hard_disks.html
That wasn't verified failure rates, it was return rates, which don't always equal failure..
It could have easily been operator failure or buyer remorse..
I just got my 128gb C300 today; will install this week.
How do you like it ?


It's not the second coming of Christ, IMO. Then again, it's not all that bad. For most things like web browsing and just general use it's not heads and shoulders above a spindle drive...but I expected that.
But I'll say this, when it blows you away, it REALLY blows you away. It makes short work of expanding large compressed files (1GB+) which my spindle drives positively dink around on, and it's just completely savage in ripping through my photo directories which is a huge failure of any spindle I've ever used.
Here's the one bench that I ran on it after a clean install of Windows 7 64-bit. Proper drivers installed and all apps on:
(Samsung F3 vs Intel 120 GB)
![]()

Your write numbers are very high. Infact higher than I think i've ever seen on a intel drive. which Firmware is on that drive and which RST drivers are you using?
yeah intel if you don't want to worry about it.
if you want to have mad super high benchmarks when you use Zero (0) fill mode benchmarks - then get the sandforce. it will impress everyone with amazing numbers that don't know better.
i'm on the same firware and using the newest RST's aswell I guess the difference is due to the amount of free space.
Your write numbers are very high. Infact higher than I think i've ever seen on a intel drive. which Firmware is on that drive and which RST drivers are you using?
My 120 GB Intel came in today, and I'm getting ready to install it and put W64 on it.
See everyone in 8 minutes.
All Sandforce users should read this thread carefully.
http://www.ocztechnologyforum.com/f...Vertex2)-expected-Benchmarks-and-General-Info
Here is the thing, if you hammer the driver with say enough writes that the drive would under normal use/see in 7 days within a few hrs, the drive will slow down for 7 days, maybe longer. It does this to protect the nand life. So your guys seeing a 50% drop may actually see 30% which is the normal drop, then a further 20% because at some stage they have hammered the drive and then not realised its going to take 5 days or longer for the speed to creep back up. Also remember this write quantity slowdown is further impacted by how you use the drive after you have hammered it.cliff notes?