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While they are still a relatively new and expensive technology, Solid state drives or SSDs for short are showing they are the future. While not all SSDs are created equal, Intel's drives are second to none in terms of the booting up of an OS or a specific application. The future only looks brighter as Hard Drives seem to be a thing of the past. SSDs use no moving parts and are based off of flash technology (not Adobe Flash).
More info later.
Simple explanation: Think of a USB drive with hundreds of gigabytes.
I'm really hoping to see these in the market at a reasonable price soon. It'll take my 3 minute vista boot time and turn it into 1 minute... Only because vista sucks at booting. I suppose XP would boot in a matter of seconds.
In Ubuntu 10.04 you can boot to an SSD in under 10 seconds. Actually, on my HDD, its only about 8 seconds, so I'd imagine about a 5 second boost on equivalent hardware (that is, Intel Atom Processor, Acer Aspire One Netbook, 1GB RAM).
...Which makes sense, since Ubuntu only requires 386MB of RAM.
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In Ubuntu 10.04 you can boot to an SSD in under 10 seconds. Actually, on my HDD, its only about 8 seconds, so I'd imagine about a 5 second boost on equivalent hardware (that is, Intel Atom Processor, Acer Aspire One Netbook, 1GB RAM).
...Which makes sense, since Ubuntu only requires 386MB of RAM. |
Night and day difference to the traditional hard drive, if compared one on one. (Ignore RAID setups.) The traditional drive, filled with moving platters, will always take time to spin around and find the data in question that it needs. SSD's, being flash, can find whatever they need, instantaneously. No wait, no delay, other then the usual bottlenecks. It's great! Just expensive as hell, and has a short lifespan.
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Night and day difference to the traditional hard drive, if compared one on one. (Ignore RAID setups.) The traditional drive, filled with moving platters, will always take time to spin around and find the data in question that it needs. SSD's, being flash, can find whatever they need, instantaneously. No wait, no delay, other then the usual bottlenecks. It's great! Just expensive as hell, and has a short lifespan.
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Flash media degrades over time, so they usually last a lot less than hard drives. But for most people the 3-5 years they do last is enough.
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