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Having fairly recently bought some 120GB SSDs to upgrade old laptops, I am not in the market for this one, but MyMemory is currently offering a 240GB SSD for under £28.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostHaving fairly recently bought some 120GB SSDs to upgrade old laptops, I am not in the market for this one, but MyMemory is currently offering a 240GB SSD for under £28.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI was thinking in terms of a replacement for the C: hard drive. I am quite happy with USB memory sticks and hard drives for external storage. They have definitely dropped in price recently.
if it were possible to use a larger SSD with my MacBook Pro I’d do it, but Apple chose to use a less standard format for the internal SSD. I think there’s a firm which supplies a kit, and maybe offers a memory replacement service, but it’s quite expensive.
SSDs in USB 3 enclosures work quite well. Unfortunately there aren’t any really good affordable FireWire enclosures which might work with older iMacs to give an improvement over USB 2.
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When I say "old", none are earlier than i3 based. One has been my main workhorse for a good many years and has the advantage of a Blu-ray compatible optical disc drive but needs a good clear-out of unused software packages, a thorough defragging and then cloning to one of the 120GB SSDs to restore it to some sort of speed of operation. The current C: drive is only a 320GB, so is only used for decidedly short-term data storage before transfer to external drives. There is nothing I can do regarding the tiny ACER Aspire One Cloudbook 11 that I carry about as a sort of tablet plus. The C: drive on that is a 32 GB eMMC, soldered into the motherboard, so no possibility of upgrading to SSD. At least I can now instal Windows 10 updates since Microsoft introduced that ability to use a USB memory stick as part of the process.
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If you've got USB 3 sockets, then putting an SSD in an enclosure is quite a good way to back off files - faster and safer than using a hard drive. I lost one portable hard drive because it was attached to my laptop, then fell off. The wire "saved" it, but it banged into something on the way down, and never worked again. SSDs don't have that problem. However it's not so worthwhile if your computers only have USB 2 interfaces, as even a hard drive is usually fast enough. I use USB memory sticks as well, but I think for large volumes of data SSDs are better - though larger. I have some memory sticks up to 128 Gbyte, but they tend to get hot. Some memory sticks are also quite slow, which isn't I think a problem with most SSDs.
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Just looking at the prices of some USB sticks I bought recently, 240 Gbytes equivalent would have cost around or more than £40, so if the 240 Gbyte SSD can be put in a case for under a tenner (it can) then that's not really a bad deal at all. I'm slightly tempted, though I'm not sure if the size is really right for me. It might work for others. Really depends what one wants one for - mass storage, cheap storage, robustness or speed.
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There is also this SSD - possibly slightly better - at the same price - https://www.mymemory.co.uk/integral-...2-b459eda9518c
This is a ‘P’ version, rather than a ‘V’ version.
Looks similar but slightly faster read and write speeds.
On amazon uk a number of people have reported failures with Integral SSDs, but they may just have been unlucky.
I was surprised to find that Integral appears to be based in Belarus.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThere is also this SSD - possibly slightly better - at the same price - https://www.mymemory.co.uk/integral-...2-b459eda9518c
This is a ‘P’ version, rather than a ‘V’ version.
Looks similar but slightly faster read and write speeds.
On amazon uk a number of people have reported failures with Integral SSDs, but they may just have been unlucky.
I was surprised to find that Integral appears to be based in Belarus.
https://integral.by/en
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Another complication with amazon reviews is that often products get muddled up. If you look at the reviews for the V and P versions I suspect that this may have happened, though I can't be sure. Anyway, there's no real reason why products made in Belarus should be any worse than products made by US companies and actually manufactured somewhere in the far east. If my SSD packs up in a few months time I'll go back to MyMemory - though I am taking the precaution of backing everything up to hard drives. The trouble with this is that hard drives are vulnerable in a different way ... nothing's perfect. SSDs ought to be more robust.
I'm not sure that defragging would cause problems quickly - though admittedly writing/rewriting to SSD might make problems more likely. They are supposed to be able to go for 000s of cycles, so failing in a couple of months is not good news.
Whether Apple's APFS helps for SSDs I'm not sure - does Win 10 have anything similar?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAnother complication with amazon reviews is that often products get muddled up. If you look at the reviews for the V and P versions I suspect that this may have happened, though I can't be sure. Anyway, there's no real reason why products made in Belarus should be any worse than products made by US companies and actually manufactured somewhere in the far east. If my SSD packs up in a few months time I'll go back to MyMemory - though I am taking the precaution of backing everything up to hard drives. The trouble with this is that hard drives are vulnerable in a different way ... nothing's perfect. SSDs ought to be more robust.
I'm not sure that defragging would cause problems quickly - though admittedly writing/rewriting to SSD might make problems more likely. They are supposed to be able to go for 000s of cycles, so failing in a couple of months is not good news.
Whether Apple's APFS helps for SSDs I'm not sure - does Win 10 have anything similar?
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThere is also this SSD - possibly slightly better - at the same price - https://www.mymemory.co.uk/integral-...2-b459eda9518c
This is a ‘P’ version, rather than a ‘V’ version.
Looks similar but slightly faster read and write speeds.
On amazon uk a number of people have reported failures with Integral SSDs, but they may just have been unlucky.
I was surprised to find that Integral appears to be based in Belarus.
https://integral.by/en
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