- May 9, 2005
- 3,850
- 7
- 76
Link Fixed
As far as i can tell one offers RAID and other does not? Seems like a drastic price difference..esp after the newegg savings added.
Anyone have any experience with this drive? Thinking about taking the plunge
Also was this fixed with firmware since Anand benchmark in April?
"My remaining concerns with the m4 are really not that different from those I had with the C300. Crucial's very late garbage collection allows the possibility for some very poor write speeds over time. If you're running in a configuration without TRIM support, I'd say this is enough to rule out the m4. Sure performance should recover with sequential write passes, however if your workload isn't sufficiently sequential then this could pose a problem. If you do have a TRIM enabled OS I'm not entirely sure how the m4 will behave over time. TRIM should keep things running smoothly but that will largely depend on workload. Again, I think that for most desktop/notebook users the m4 will do just fine but it's tough to say for sure without months of testing under my belt. In other words, like any other brand new SSD—approach with caution."
As far as i can tell one offers RAID and other does not? Seems like a drastic price difference..esp after the newegg savings added.
Anyone have any experience with this drive? Thinking about taking the plunge
Also was this fixed with firmware since Anand benchmark in April?
"My remaining concerns with the m4 are really not that different from those I had with the C300. Crucial's very late garbage collection allows the possibility for some very poor write speeds over time. If you're running in a configuration without TRIM support, I'd say this is enough to rule out the m4. Sure performance should recover with sequential write passes, however if your workload isn't sufficiently sequential then this could pose a problem. If you do have a TRIM enabled OS I'm not entirely sure how the m4 will behave over time. TRIM should keep things running smoothly but that will largely depend on workload. Again, I think that for most desktop/notebook users the m4 will do just fine but it's tough to say for sure without months of testing under my belt. In other words, like any other brand new SSD—approach with caution."
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