I have been running an SSD on my main work system for a year, and hwile they are expensive i find them completely worth it for day to day disk access. even with something as bloated and overly chatty as windows it has been great. they have wear leveling algorithms to make sure you don't kill spots in the drive. and they have brought the prices down to a very reasonable level. however do your research on models/brand for reliability/quality. there are some good consumer drives, but also some very iffy ones.


On Tue, Apr 2, 2013 at 12:52 PM, Nadim Hoque <nadimhoque@gmail.com> wrote:
Technically they are supposed to last just as long as regular hard drives but again the problem is that no one really tested in a production environment. From what I hear (I may be wrong) but most people use the ssd essentially as a cache space and even in enterprises they do. This is what I suggest you do with the SSD so that if the drive does die, you don't lose your important data.


On Tue, Apr 2, 2013 at 12:27 PM, Derek Trotter <expat.arizonan@gmail.com> wrote:
I have a question about SSDs.  I've read that they like the USB thumb drives can be written to a certain number of times before they fail.  What is the expected lifetime of an SSD?  They're terribly expensive if they're only going to last 2 or 3 years.

Derek

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Nadim Hoque
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