http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Toshiba/HNSNC512GBSJ/?APC=READERSPC&Source=Blast12SepHas anyone seen this? Looks like a really great deal, but I don't know what the reviews on this are like. I know that Apple does use this, but does it degrade over time like some other SSD's I know.Anyone have any experience with this?[Edited on September 27, 2012 at 2:30 AM. Reason : a]
9/27/2012 2:29:48 AM
in SSD world, that's old tech. Best try to find newer models using smaller NAND chips than 32nm with faster transfer rates and SATA III interface instead of II. Honestly, if you don't need an SSD right now, wait a few months. We are just in the middle of an SSD price war and high capacity drives like these's will become even more reasonably priced.
9/27/2012 5:01:06 AM
I keep going back to this and the amount of space seems to outweigh the speed. I have a MBP Late 2008 so it's not SATA III compliant.Anyone know how this holds up? Does it degrade over time?
9/30/2012 3:43:18 PM
Every single SSD degrades over time. All of them. They literally wear out. And generally the performance degrades as well until you reinstall, though I believe trim is supposed to help with that.
9/30/2012 5:46:14 PM
I was pretty pissed when my SSD just died and I had to then reinstall windows on my "content" drive. Plus all my old hard drives from the early 2000s still function when I plug them in. Fuck SSD tech.
9/30/2012 6:16:25 PM
9/30/2012 7:24:53 PM
Well, that was a lot of writing to pretty much reiterate 90% of what I said in more detail. Don't get me wrong. I like the detail, I think it was a bit overkill for someone who is too lazy to do their own research.
9/30/2012 7:43:55 PM
I appreciate that post Jbaz. Thank you.
9/30/2012 8:03:31 PM
Atleast this way, OP has a better understanding of how things work in an SSD and what to look for instead of buying into some marketing BS that really doesn't make sense or work. I just hate the idea of people upgrading or throwing away money when they don't need to, specially if a simple solution is avaliable or just not cost effective for a certain demographic. As for my first response, we should start seeing SATA III 512 drives for the same cost as OP SATA II drives. Even if your laptop is capped at SATA II, you would still benefit from better, stable NAND's and if the drive uses a better, updated controller chip. The biggest bog downs with SSD's has always been handling compressed files (archived as in zip, jpeg, mpeg's), which can drop from 500+MB/sec to just a crawl of 20MB/sec in some older drives (depending on NAND and controller type as well as what is being transferred and by what application).It all depends on what you want and the price you are willing to pay for it.
9/30/2012 8:06:11 PM
9/30/2012 9:44:30 PM
JBaz, I really appreciate your help. I have a fuller, stronger understanding now and will definitely wait to see how this price war ends.Again, thank you for the plethora of information. I tried finding problems with SSD but only was met on how it was so much better than HDD. I get it, they are better than HDD, but still wanted to know what the pitfalls were and could not seem to wade through the diluted information.
10/1/2012 1:22:23 AM
10/1/2012 11:49:11 AM
My set up is placing the OS and other programs on the SSD while other media files such as photos, music and movies are placed in a HDD. The entire system does move a lot faster because of the read/write speeds of an SSD, but at the same time, I simply didn't know enough about SSD's. My system has not slowed down even a little since I've had the SSD and it's breathed new life into my machine. The selling points aren't very accurate, but it's just a sample of how well it works. The entire system is cooler, so it does run more efficiently. With the mentioned price war, I'm hoping to see a stronger threshold across systems.
10/1/2012 1:31:09 PM
Storage space is not a concern of mine, at all. I have my OS and 2 games installed. Having the games on the the SSD makes a huge difference in load times. My OS boots up in just under half the time my laptop with a regular HDD (practically mirrored systems). Overall, the performance gain is minimal compared to the dollars spent. I mean, we are talking just seconds of performance gains here and there. But overall, I enjoy my computing experience much, much more.For comparison, I got this nearly 5 months ago.Corsair Force Series GT CSSD-F120GBGT-BK 2.5" 120GB SATA III Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) $129.99 after MIL It's now sitting at $115 on newegg and amazon without a rebate.[Edited on October 2, 2012 at 5:06 AM. Reason : .]
10/2/2012 5:02:42 AM
you can get better SSD's for $80 or less for the same size. Shit, Samsung 830 128GB is $90 without any rebates on newegg right now.
10/4/2012 6:02:20 AM
I'm keeping my eye out for anything sandforce driven because no TRIM is necessary. Anyone find any deals on those SSD's?
10/7/2012 4:46:01 AM