What kind of performance would be gained as far as speed and power consumtion in comparison?
Would all I need is a USB clone kit to move my HD info onto this SSD?
Where can these drives be found. I know of one for $900
Thanks for any help in advance



Many thanks for this info - I did read somewhere that reliability is questionable and seems to be less than of the standard hard disk. Will be staying away from it.hellosailor wrote:Caveat emptor on flash drives. The typical chips used in USB sticks and the like are good for 5000 writes, and then they start failing. Other chips are good for 100,000 writes--at much higher prices.
Before I tried to steal the money for a solid-state hard drive, I'd want to know how many write cycles it was guaranteed for, and compare that to how many I MIGHT put on it, in the worst case use. These are still very much "consumable" parts, at this time.
It could also improve speed when doing frequent code compilation (Java or C++ development), where you have many small file accesses (and therefore potentially many seeks) and then small file (couple of Ks) writes. However, if one cannot trust the device to keep data indefinitely then it cannot be used for it.ljwobker wrote:it's very true that all flash chips have a finite number of write cycles, but *most* of the newer SSDs are using chips that have very large write cycle capabilities, and have abstraction layer hardware that "evens out" the wear on any one portion of the drive.
If you're looking at the most recent generation of drives, their expected lifetimes should be perfectly good enough for the majority of users. If you're doing something where you write to the drive all day (i.e. massive video editing, constant database manipulation) you may want to stick with mechanical, but I don't think the majority of thinkpad users fit that category.
HTH.
--lj

Short of hardware defects, hard drives still have an expected lifetime of many more years than the SSDs have at the moment, AFAIK.hellosailor wrote:"However, if one cannot trust the device to keep data indefinitely then it cannot be used for it. "
By that standard, you can only use a magneto-optical drive and you can't even use a conventional hard drive. M/O drives are rated for archival performance (over 100 years) unlike conventional hard drives, which have always had spontaneous failures as the media sometimes flakes off the platters from maufacturing defects, or are damaged from routine debirs and head crashes or simple shocks jogging the heads during use.
Granted that hard drives are way more reliable than they were 15 years ago, they are still not a reliable means of archival storage.
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