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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Memory upgrade and CPU bit-width question
- Date: Tue, 5 Jan 2016 23:44:39 +0800
- From: Raymond Wan <rwan.kyoto@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Memory upgrade and CPU bit-width question
- References: <1450687817.3121740.472827081.5FB453FD@webmail.messagingengine.com> <CAAhy3dvo==Bcum9sCrB4oMffFhhf0BaZTp-RmnG9WXnMAsPiUQ@mail.gmail.com> <CAKXLc7fTRuN9rfNkjGvenSB4AR+ktk5rbGcX5QhMmNv11cZsQA@mail.gmail.com> <1451605763.164404.480217026.5ED0DE17@webmail.messagingengine.com> <CAAhy3duzCbVyrLX1OQ4EDrnB=woH-nK_3CDzF8D28J+LCacfrg@mail.gmail.com> <20160104043257.GD3188@monotonic.cynic.net> <CAAhy3duNqaSmqxCQYtEBZTR95mUCHRYwpLNOQgGJWHUvgh919w@mail.gmail.com> <CAFv52OD7m67SQM9p7EzzzmwhevkKmw_K0_aQT4rKyojs_yBirg@mail.gmail.com>
On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 6:42 PM, Josh Glover <jmglov@example.com> wrote: > On 4 January 2016 at 08:31, Raymond Wan <rwan.kyoto@example.com> wrote: > Just to add one more data point, I've had three ThinkPad T4x0(s) > laptops in the past four years of work (the latest, a T450s, is only > three months old), all three with SSDs, and had no problems with data > loss or notable performance degradation after 2 / 1.5 / 0.25 years. Good to hear! I guess portable SSD drives (yes, I meant USB) are similar in technology to flash drives but more reliable. None of my flash drives have so far failed -- in fact, their maximum capacity became too small relative to the files being copied and I actually stopped using them before they actually failed. >> I was looking at portable SSDs recently [...] > > By portable, do you mean USB? I was going to recommend ensuring that > the USB bus could transfer data faster than a mechanical drive, but I > just did a bit of research, and was astounded to see that USB 3.0 can > transfer data at 5 Gbps! [1] The fastest mechanical drives seen to be > capable of about 1.6 Gbps sustained read [2], so the bus won't be the > bottleneck there. However, as USB 2.0 is limited to 480 Mbps, an SSD > is pointless in that case. > > So, unless I'm missing something obvious, buy an external SSD only if > you have a USB 3.0 port to connect it to, and make sure you don't plug > it into the wrong port by accident. My last ThinkPad had only one 3.0 > port and three 2.0 ones, and it's a reasonably high-end model, so I > don't think that all laptops have only 3.0 ports these days. Thanks for to tip! I have USB 3.0 ports, so I guess it is worth purchasing. Actually, I got a portable hard disk and a (smaller) SSD several years ago and the hard disk recently failed. Luckily, I didn't lose anything valuable, but seeing it as a paperweight was making me think of considering a larger SSD for my backup needs. And yes, before this thread, I was worried about the reads/writes on an SSD, but I guess one problem with hard disks (portable or not) is that they are more sensitive to transport? The HDD that failed had far less reads/writes done to it than the SSD. But it was physically moved a lot, so I was thinking that was why it failed. Or maybe it failed because it failed...and I shouldn't look too deeply into it. :-) Ray
- References:
- Re: [tlug] Memory upgrade and CPU bit-width question
- From: David J Iannucci
- Re: [tlug] Memory upgrade and CPU bit-width question
- From: Raymond Wan
- Re: [tlug] Memory upgrade and CPU bit-width question
- From: Curt Sampson
- Re: [tlug] Memory upgrade and CPU bit-width question
- From: Raymond Wan
- Re: [tlug] Memory upgrade and CPU bit-width question
- From: Josh Glover
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