Flash Drive v. Hard Drive For New Laptop
I have been looking at new laptop specifications and came across the Sony F series which is touted as a "workstation."
Here are the choices for drives:
The capacity of 256 GB seems rather small although adequate for me . I'm wondering if this will be upgradeable in the future without voiding the warranty. Your thoughts and suggestions will be appreciated. |
The biggest benefit is speed. The SSD is much faster than an mechanical drive. Battery life, heat, and noise should also be better w/ the SSD.
|
Originally Posted by BigMoneyGrip
(Post 15761605)
The biggest benefit is speed. The SSD is much faster than an mechanical drive.
|
Everything is significantly faster.
Hard drives are prone to damage from dropping or hitting the computer. SSDs are not. I have a Dell Adamo with an anemic 1.4 Ghz chip. With the SSD, it is speedy. |
I am awed by the boot up and program launch speed of the Dell laptop I ordered with SSD.....One thing to note if you are much of a geek is that the price of the SSD drives is dropping pretty quickly. You can now get a 120 gig SSD for $200 or less. You could order your laptop with the smallest hard drive and then clone it onto an SSD.
|
Originally Posted by mikel51
(Post 15762053)
I am awed by the boot up and program launch speed of the Dell laptop I ordered with SSD.....One thing to note if you are much of a geek is that the price of the SSD drives is dropping pretty quickly. You can now get a 120 gig SSD for $200 or less. You could order your laptop with the smallest hard drive and then clone it onto an SSD.
|
Originally Posted by Landing Gear
(Post 15762102)
Yes, but I looked at Frys and found that the price of a 256 GB SSD was not significantly cheaper than what Sony was charging factory-installed.
An extra $650 is a rip-off. Buy the cheapest HDD and then swap it out with your own SSD. |
Originally Posted by Braindrain
(Post 15762266)
+1
An extra $650 is a rip-off. Buy the cheapest HDD and then swap it out with your own SSD. 256 GB SSD Drive prices: $470-700. Plus, what happens to the warranty? I wonder what brand of SSD is in the Sony? Do Seagate, Western Digital, and the other well-known companies make laptop SSDs? |
Originally Posted by Landing Gear
(Post 15762354)
Please take a look here at Frys.
256 GB SSD Drive prices: $470-700. Plus, what happens to the warranty? I wonder what brand of SSD is in the Sony? Do Seagate, Western Digital, and the other well-known companies make laptop SSDs? I have been watching the price of SSD's and they arent coming down fast enough for me to bite and $500 is just too much for me to pull the trigger but if you are getting a new machine and the extra dollars do not bother you...I would go that direction. This is where the technology is going because of speed, power consumption and reliability. As far as who makes them. WD, Seagate do make them but I am seeing more from Crucial, OCZ and Kingston. I would assume because they are better suited to manufacture but dont know why for sure. |
The 128GB ssd's run only $250-350. I've put in cheap ssd's on a beater think pad and my wife's rev a MacBook Air, and the speed improvement is noticeable. What is important for you, hard drive space or speed?
|
Originally Posted by BigMoneyGrip
(Post 15761605)
The biggest benefit is speed. The SSD is much faster than an mechanical drive. Battery life, heat, and noise should also be better w/ the SSD.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/...tery,1955.html |
Originally Posted by frankmu
(Post 15762712)
The 128GB ssd's run only $250-350. I've put in cheap ssd's on a beater think pad and my wife's rev a MacBook Air, and the speed improvement is noticeable. What is important for you, hard drive space or speed?
How soon will there be larger capacity SSDs, say 500 or 1TB? Does anyone know if there are warranty issues if you change the drive yourself on a laptop? |
Is the benefit of speed (faster boot up etc) really worth the premium?
Unless you are doing some data transfer-intensive work normal hard disks should be perfectly all right. |
I was OK with a 120GB drive for my laptop....I use it for work, so I don't have lots of media files--with years of emails, word files and powerpoints, I only have 50GB of files. If you need a bigger drive, you may find hard drives more cost effective/worthwhile.
|
Originally Posted by KIXman
(Post 15763398)
Is the benefit of speed (faster boot up etc) really worth the premium?
Unless you are doing some data transfer-intensive work normal hard disks should be perfectly all right. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 5:40 am. |
This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.