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Pros: I got 4 of these for a raid zero array 6 months ago and get 1000 mb/sec. Windows loads in 8 sec instead of 30 and myrsis gained 6 fps ! These drives also use no power and they arent even plugged in. Cons: I am a dork who writes reviews and doesen't own the produkt. I sukk.
Very tempting... IMO OCZ is the first company out of the gate with a nice jump in 'bang for your buck' for these normally too expensive drives. Presumably more will follow suit soon.
Looks like you may need a separate 2.5" to 3.5" adapter bracket for a desktop. Yeah, this is becoming very tempting. I've seen one on eBay for about $8 shipped.
hawaiian2002 said:Looks like you may need a separate 2.5" to 3.5" adapter bracket for a desktop. Yeah, this is becoming very tempting. I've seen one on eBay for about $8 shipped.
Or you can make your own if you have paper clips and rubber bands... a similar mounting as the antec p150...
IOW, if one included memory chip goes bad do you lose the entire drive, or do you just lose some capacity.
Also it'd be nice to know the length of the warranty. I mean, RAM sometimes is warrantied for life. Wonder if this is, as well. If so, my first comment re mapping doesn't matter.
guardian44 said:It'd be interesting to know how this is mapped.
IOW, if one included memory chip goes bad do you lose the entire drive, or do you just lose some capacity.
Also it'd be nice to know the length of the warranty. I mean, RAM sometimes is warrantied for life. Wonder if this is, as well. If so, my first comment re mapping doesn't matter.
You don't need to know anything about how it's mapped. All modern flash memory includes a controller - that controller handles what's called 'wear leveling'. Wear leveling ensures that each part of the flash drive receives approximately the same number of writes...thus hugely extending the life of the drive. In addition, there is a fair number of extra sectors that the controller can map to when it finds a bad one so you won't lose capacity (or even notice) when the odd sector or two goes bad.
I'll spare the math (this isn't slashdot after all) but you can generally write non-stop to these drives for something like 2-5 years before you're into failure territory. The only way that would happen is if you had it in a high demand database server or similar. In normal computer/laptop use the drive will greatly outlive the usefullness of it's size. You'll replace it before it wears out.
guardian44 said:It'd be interesting to know how this is mapped.
IOW, if one included memory chip goes bad do you lose the entire drive, or do you just lose some capacity.
Also it'd be nice to know the length of the warranty. I mean, RAM sometimes is warrantied for life. Wonder if this is, as well. If so, my first comment re mapping doesn't matter.
According to Amazon.com, the warranty is for 2 years. Also found this on website:
IMPORTANT NOTE: Solid State Drives DO NOT require defragmentation. It may decrease the lifespan of the drive.
I would buy this now and flip it in on eBay before the warranty expires.
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