On Mon, 23 Jun 2014 19:21:41 -0700 Joseph Loo <jloo20111...@gmail.com> wrote: > I think you are missing the problem associated with SSd. The wear > problem is associated with the amount of free space. If the drive > is 99.99% full, you could probably wear the drive out in no time > at all. The wear problem is prevented by using free space that has > not been written to it. thus if 00 % full drive will wear out > faster than a drive that is 1% full. If you do not speak in > context of the percentage full the benchmarks are not too useful.
Not at all. What I'm saying is SSD may be good for kitchen usage, not for heavy use (and especially big files often fully rewritten, as in CAD systems). And this is what you confirm below. > Most consumer grade ssd are limited to about 10K writes per cell. > If you exceed the limit, dead cell. Remember that another factor > involve is the number of spare cells. all of these things play in > the role when an ssd fails. Re-reading the beginning of your §, I'm now asking myself a terrible question (as the 10K barrier last for long now): is the 10K a real physical barrier to SSD life, or is it the same like the 1,000 hours duration for light bulbs. I know there's a "cage destruction" effect when writing a SSD cell, nevertheless I wouldn't be surprised that this barrier's already broken but stays covered (imagine a technological breakthrough that would allow 1000K writes/cell, it would be spinning HDz' end right'o and a more than a significant SSD sales decrease rapidly). I'm not writing a novel, I know a bit of physics and some people that are researchers in the branch of new/improved techniques of substrates masking/doping… -- <Manou15> Fed up with live <Zealot> Ur right, Ur 16, Ur future's before U, no money problems, a PC, food, a web access, a hot bedroom, a family, Christmas gifts, may be pocket money, only some homework to do when back to home, boring teachers, friends, a plasma TV, a Wii, but life is not fair, I understand U… <Manou15> I don't have a Wii yet <Zealot> Damn U…
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