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Author Topic: Solid State Drives  (Read 5931 times)

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guest3110

  • Guest
Re: Solid State Drives
« Reply #14 from previous page: May 07, 2009, 02:47:14 PM »
Thanks for the link to that article, pyrre.

Quote
by pyrre:

And a 4TB one planned.



Things are definitely going to get interesting.  :-D
 

Offline pyrre

Re: Solid State Drives
« Reply #15 on: May 07, 2009, 03:02:33 PM »
Quote
Things are definitely going to get interesting.


And insanely expensive.....

But hopefully the smaller SSD disks becomes cheap now...
Amiga 1200 Tower Os 3.9
BPPC 603e+ 040-25/200, 256MBram, BVIsionPPC, Indivision AGA MK2.
Amiga 2000 (rev 4.0) Os 1.2/1.3
2088 bridgeboard, 2MB ram card, 2091 SCSI.
Amiga 500+ Os 2.1
Derringer 030, 32MBram, Buddha in sidecar, Indivision ECS.
Amiga CD32
Video decoder
 

ChuckT

  • Guest
Solid State Drives
« Reply #16 on: May 19, 2009, 05:32:50 PM »
Quote from: pyrre;452675
What SSD disks and flash devices are you talking about?

Dedicated SSD disks will endure any shock you ever (under normal circumstances) will put a harddrive trough.

SD and CF cards cannot in any way be compared to SSD...


The science display at the Franklin Institute had ten times the normal current that your average house has.  I wasn't shocked but I put my hand on a display so I don't know if any static electricity went through the drive.

I just know that the early Lexar Thumbdrive (USB 1.1 or 1.0) started to give me problems after touching it and it shortly stopped working after that.  Once I sensed trouble, I copied my files off of it before it stopped working.  I pulled it apart and I believe there was a chip by Samsung in there and inside the housing the chip was just resting on the board with the case holding it in place and shut and I still stand by Lexar drives as the Firefly are pricey but they are my favorite drives.

http://www.g4techtv.ca/callforhelp/shownotes/0389.shtml?answers