I don't know that Intel is more reliable. Intel DOES have really fast RMA turnaround. For someone like Lunar the fact is that a drive failure would just be a reason to go buy another drive anyway so it probably doesn't matter as much for him.
So you plan for the notebook to outlast you?I would probably use the boot drive for ~1000 hours assuming the notebook lasts until 2016-2017.
That's one of the factors with SSDs. Once you reach the point that you can't write to the drive, out comes the drills/hammers to destroy the drive. (Since erasure requires a write cycle).
Because the market for 1TB drives in a 2.5" form factor is vanishingly small.
Nope. Completely difference controller.So the Intel is a section of the 910 in a drive?
Oh wow. I'm really tired I guess. Different instead of difference. See you all tomorrow morning, after a good long night sleep.
I prefer 830 even though the 840 is faster. I question the 840's potential longevity. It may be long enough for consumer use but 830 is going to be better and is fast enough.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/6459/samsung-ssd-840-testing-the-endurance-of-tlc-nand
The overall impression I have is that among the top-tier vendors, pretty much every SSD is fast enough for pretty much every normal sort of workload.
Or at least that I can't really tell a subjective difference between say an Intel 330, a Samsung 820 and an OCZ Agility 3.
I agree here. That would put SSDs at roughly ten times the price per GB of mechanical drives. Even better, it puts ~200GB SSDs right around the $100 price point. This is about the most your average buyer is willing to pay for a hard drive. 200GB is a large enough size for many people to use as their only storage. Back when all you could get for $100 was maybe 32 GB, SSDs still needed to be supplemented by mechanical drives for bulk storage. $0.50 per GB should be the price point at which we see mass adoption of SSDs. That in turn should result in further price drops. I wouldn't be surprised to see us at $0.25 per GB by the end of 2013. Helping SSDs along also is the fact that none of today's mechanical drives seem all that reliable, at least the ones priced at $100 or less.I would not be at all surprised if we start seeing $.50/GB ~500GB SSDs by the end of Q1 2013.
Lunar: Still pissed that he can't buy a 4TB SSD yet.
:rofl: Newegg is selling refurb OCZ SSDs. Who in their right mind would buy those?