dont try movin your case while its on, the centrif. forces will be huge
dont try movin your case while its on, the centrif. forces will be huge
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Oh and Vista Ultimate (i know, I KNOW!)
WTH???? i wanna see this thing in action
Watch this be a $900 Drive too![]()
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wonder how much faster they can make them, before the platters decide to explode from the forces put on them, just from them spinning up on boot
Nah, Seagate makes SSD's already.
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i5 750 4.20GHz @ NH-D14 | 8GB | P7P55DLE | 8800U | Indilinx SSD + Samsung F3 | HAF922 + CM750W
Past: Q6600 @ 3.60 E6400 @ 3.60 | E6300 @ 3.40 | O165 @ 2.90 | X2 4400+ @ 2.80 | X2 3800+ @ 2.70 | VE 3200+ @ 2.80 | WI 3200+ @ 2.75 | WI 3000+ no IHS @ 2.72 | TBB 1700+ @ 2.60 | XP-M 2500+ @ 2.63 | NC 2800+ @ 2.40 | AB 1.60GHz @ 2.60Originally Posted by CompGeek
Umm, while I'm certianly not the biggest fan of its overuse, you're arguing that magnetized disks benefit from "the number of transistors that can be inexpensively placed on an integrated circuit is increasing exponentially, doubling approximately every two years"
I would be surprised if potential 20k isn't more server oriented with a benefit of selling a high margin product to a small group of pc enthusiasts.
i5 750 4.20GHz @ NH-D14 | 8GB | P7P55DLE | 8800U | Indilinx SSD + Samsung F3 | HAF922 + CM750W
Past: Q6600 @ 3.60 E6400 @ 3.60 | E6300 @ 3.40 | O165 @ 2.90 | X2 4400+ @ 2.80 | X2 3800+ @ 2.70 | VE 3200+ @ 2.80 | WI 3200+ @ 2.75 | WI 3000+ no IHS @ 2.72 | TBB 1700+ @ 2.60 | XP-M 2500+ @ 2.63 | NC 2800+ @ 2.40 | AB 1.60GHz @ 2.60Originally Posted by CompGeek
While I agree SSD's are great and offer a very nice increase in performance, price and performance is just not there. And you have to remember we make up a very small percentage of the market. Do you think it matters if a program takes an extra few seconds to load? No. I feel it will be years before we see the same price and performance in SSD's.
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I'd begin to question bearing life at those rotational speeds, especially since this is targeted more towards enthusiasts then the server segment
Fold for XS!
You know you want to
No, it is their only option. For companies like this that are so invested in traditional HDD, they have to do everything they possibly can to prevent their products from becoming obsolete. Most of the HDD manufactures arent going to be able to catch up if they started investing in SSD now.
While I like the move to SSD and the potential they show, they are also going to be putting a few companies out of business.
noise of that new drive might be deafening.
"IS THAT THE NEW 20K RAPTOR IN YOUR RIG?"
"WHAT?"
Speed, SSD > HDD
Price, SSD > HDD
RMA rate, SSD > HDD
SSD = RAM which its RMA, DOA, damage rate much higher than HDD that is for sure
Plus, you cannot use SSD to attack, but your HDD is good for protection lol
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does it come with a lazer sword?
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Because they can't be yet.
Currently they are meant to be the only storage device in mobile and rugged computers. This is the same market as small HDDs.
Also, they are meant to be small and fast storage - that's exactly where Raptor is now.
Also, in enterprise market, they are used for storing bigger amounts of data (not as big as HDDs yet though ) even when their speed is not that important.
http://www.superssd.com/products/ramsan-440/
In this case, flash is used because it's cheap enough. And makes the whole ram disk start up quicker which is a rare case as such things aren't meant to be shut down too often.
_____________________________________
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its still just a matter of time till flash drives mature enough, i'm not going to argue that traditional drives don't have a place now.
Probably in 1-2 years tops given the rate that flash drives have taken all of a sudden they might be a moot point from a capacity, speed and reliability perspective.
Only thing is SSDs have lost traction in data centers. Their failure rates are astonishing--especially compared to HDDs. You simply can't rely on them--and replacing a drive twice or more a year becomes quite a burden on human resources. For the price of a decent SSD, you can buy a high-grade SCSI drive of equal capacity, though that SCSI drive has an advantage in reliability and they're about equal in read/write speeds. Only thing is SSDs have nearly no access time, though that doesn't help them once they start dying.
Last edited by Bobsama; 08-20-2008 at 09:22 AM.
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