Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
Hey, Buck is posting!?!
Welcome back Buck!
Welcome back Buck!
You have two of these? That's too costly for the performance.
OCZ has been throwing out random rebates to keep ahead on price. If you're willing to follow that game, it seems like there will always be a cheaper Vertex out there.Now that I know that the other drives are basically the same thing, I'll be keeping an eye on their pricing as well...
I was finally able to find the answer to this one.Right, but this is a SATA drive, and SATA 3.0Gbps wasn't out when the current SAS standard (let alone the card that I have) was made.
http://anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=3608
"Intel Forces OCZ's Hand: Indilinx Drives To Drop in Price"
Seeing as nobody pays MSRP, Agility drives should start to get dirt cheap (in relative terms)."Intel Forces OCZ's Hand: Indilinx Drives To Drop in Price"
Seeing as nobody pays MSRP, Agility drives should start to get dirt cheap (in relative terms).
How slow can you go, and not have it perform any worse than 7200RPM laptop drive?
I'm not sure why you would buy the 60GB OCZ Vertex over a 80GB Intel though, even at the new pricing levels.
http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3607Are there any reviews out for the second gen Intel SSD?
What I found interesting there was the talk of OCZ's 3.5" Colossus SSD in capacities up to 1TB at prices of $2.15/GB ($2200). We are getting there.
I like Techreport's review more. They have real-world STR-driven tests using large file copies.
It's interesting, for example, that despite having less STR in HD Tach then its competitors, the X25-M surpasses them in real-world benchmarks for which STR is the largest factor. Why? Who knows, but the Intel consistently dominates in all real world scenarios.
File Copy Test is a pseudo-real-world benchmark that times how long it takes to create, read, and copy files in various test patterns. We've converted those completion times to MB/s to make the results easier to interpret....For our tests, we created custom MP3, video, and program files test patterns weighing in at roughly 10GB each. The MP3 test pattern was created from a chunk of my own archive of ultra-high-quality MP3s, while the video test pattern was built from a mix of video files ranging from 360MB to 1.4GB in size. The program files test pattern was derived from, you guessed it, the contents of our test system's Program Files directory.
Even with these changes, we noticed a little more variability in FC-Test performance than we'd like to see.
Normally, we run tests three times and average the results, but for FC-Test, we've run each test five times before averaging. We also had to perform some additional test runs to replace obviously erroneous results that cropped up occasionally with each of the drives, usually on the first one or two test runs. The X25-M G2 was a particularly egregious offender on this front, with its performance varying wildly through the first three to four test runs before settling down to consistent, repeatable levels. We've asked Intel why that is, but have yet to get a response.
I like Techreport's review more. They have real-world STR-driven tests using large file copies.
It's interesting, for example, that despite having less STR in HD Tach then its competitors, the X25-M surpasses them in real-world benchmarks for which STR is the largest factor. Why? Who knows, but the Intel consistently dominates in all real world scenarios.
Need SATA 6GB/s like yesterday
OCZ Colossus early testing data, now with ETA and pricing
http://www.pcper.com/comments.php?nid=7527
and it won't be for a while: Intel pulled the product because of a bug in the firmware that potentially caused catastrophic data loss. Note under normal circumstances you would not have a problem. From my reading, to get the loss you had to password protect the drive and then change the password.The new Intel SSD is now listed on Newegg. Not in stock though.