New Toy!

Jan. 6th, 2012 12:55 am
bjarvis: (Default)
[personal profile] bjarvis
I bought myself an early birthday present: an SSD to replace the hard drive in my netbook.

My netbook itself is nothing impressive: it was commodity hardware three years ago when I bought it for $300 or so. Even then it wasn't the fastest machine by any stretch. Still, it is small, lightweight and does what I need it to very reliably. My needs are simple at the machine fits my needs.

A few months ago, I replaced the battery as the old one was reaching the end of its useful lifespan. The improvement was so great I kicked myself for weeks that I hadn't done it sooner. A couple of months ago, I doubled the RAM installed; it was a nice improvement in performance although not earth-shattering. The cost of the RAM replacement was so insignificant (about $30) that again I kicked myself for not having done it sooner.

The old 120GB hard drive is adequate for my purposes, especially since I archive large media files to an external disk, so I hadn't given it a great deal of thought. Still, I've read a number of articles extorting the masses to make the transition to an SSD for a typical three-fold speed increase and an enormous improvement in battery life. The costs were a little daunting but I received a coupon for a modest price break on a SATA drive nearly the same size as the disk in my netbook, so I indulged myself.

I'm kicking myself I didn't do this sooner.

OK, my netbook is only the older SATA interface instead of SATA III so I'm not seeing the full gain, but it has cut the boot time in half. Apps jump onto the screen when executed instead of grudgingly appearing. At this point, I have only just started playing with it so I can't say what different it has on the overall battery life, but I'm hoping for good things.

In all, I thought my tried & true netbook just gained another year or two of useful life.

Date: 2012-01-06 02:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chrishansenhome.livejournal.com
Good luck with that. My computer's SSD (64GB) just died on me after about 9 months of use. Apparently, dying SSDs are not uncommon...

I'm going to buy a 256GB SATA drive to replace the SSD. I only lost one day's work, mostly emails, but that is really a pain.

Date: 2012-01-06 02:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] theoctothorpe.livejournal.com
The best thing I did was replace the horrible stock 3Gbit/5400RPM drive in my 13" MacBook Pro with an OWC 6Gbit/sec SSD. It is insanely fast, slightly lighter than the original drive, and it seems I'm getting better battery life, although I haven't had it long enough to truly judge.

Date: 2012-01-06 06:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] abqdan.livejournal.com
I recently ended up down a rabbit hole on the Internet, which took me to an in-depth tutorial on how SSDs store data. I was surprised to find the memory only has a certain number of cycles before it stops retaining data. There is sophisticated logic that uses additional 'spare' areas to compensate as the memory degrades, but I was left wondering how long an SSD will last in regular use. The degradation isn't very fast, but it seems once the 'spare' areas have been used up, the next failure will screw up the drive.

I'm tempted to follow your lead - it would be nice to have my little Toshiba netbook boot more quickly - but I'll wait and see what your experience is with the SSD first. Thanks for being my beta tester!

January 2021

S M T W T F S
     1 2
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 3rd, 2026 03:00 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios