If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
In ,
Bill in Co. typed on Mon, 9 Nov 2009 13:23:07 -0700: BillW50 wrote: In , Ken Blake, MVP typed on Mon, 09 Nov 2009 11:28:51 -0700: On Mon, 9 Nov 2009 11:22:34 -0600, "BillW50" wrote: Actually if you can believe the specs of SSDs, a manufacture claims the MTBF is 227 years. And HDD are only less than 37 years. I'm always reluctant to believe MTBF claims. They may be correct, but with numbers as high as 227 years, I have no confidence in them. Same here, but I have done the math. If every cell of a SSD can be written to 100,000 times, it would take a person overwriting the whole SSD 24 times a day for 11 years before you would wear one out. That is a lot of writing. So I can see the average user might get 227 years out of one. So I guess the bottom line is it sounds like there's really no issue with using the SSDs to replace conventional HDs except for the price (no matter which type, but skipping the DRAM ones, which don't seem useful for the general consumer). IOW, they will outlast any conventional HD (no matter what type of SSD), and are certainly a lot faster. I'm still not sure about the permanence of of the data stored in flash memory in terms of its shelf life (or maybe that was expressed in its MTBF stats), but I'm guessing that's not an real issue, either, in comparison to the mechanical drives. Yes that is about it. Except I wouldn't call the real cheap MLC SSD (vs. more expensive MLC SSD and better yet SLC SSD), as fast. As they do make some really slow MLC types. For example Super Talent has one called FPM16GHAE PATA PCIe SSD with a read speed of 45M and a write of 15MB. My personal experience is that HDD has an early failure rate of 3 out of 21. And they lasted a month or less. SSDs are hitting the same ratio, 1 out of 7. And they usually fail in a few months. And this one will work if you let it sit with power for 90 minutes. So remember this trick if you ever have one fail. And there might have been a recall on that lot. And I believe it was a failed controller on the SSD board and not any of the SSD chips themselves. -- Bill Gateway MX6124 ('06 era) - Windows XP SP2 |
Ads |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
In ,
Ken Blake, MVP typed: On Mon, 9 Nov 2009 11:22:34 -0600, "BillW50" wrote: Actually if you can believe the specs of SSDs, a manufacture claims the MTBF is 227 years. And HDD are only less than 37 years. I'm always reluctant to believe MTBF claims. They may be correct, but with numbers as high as 227 years, I have no confidence in them. MTBFs are a little like statistics; you can make them say different things at different times. Folks should remember the calcs for MTBFs are usually for laboratory conditions of a controlled environment, etc. etc.. I wouldn't expect to see an SSD drive last 200 years in use any more than I would a HDD last 37 years in use. Whether it's alpha migration or physical parts wear, neither comes out very "real" in MTBF calcs. Grease dries, irradiation degrades and all that good stuff. I've never seen a single instance of a product making its MTBF numbers, have you? MTBF is really only useful (sometimes) as a comparison factor, not real numbers. Like in the G's tests, you have no idea how the products were dropped if they don't say so and there are many different ways of speccing how to calculate (not measure) them. I used to have to do a lot of MTBF on my designs and I hated it; it felt like lying to the customers because marketing always hyped it as how long the product would last, which it definitely is not. You CAN do actual-use calcs for MTBFs, but it's expensive and time consuming so all most engineers do is use the means of the various parts within a product. It has its uses, but not in advertising, marketing or anything for the public, in reality. Cheers, Twayne` |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
Actually, HD MTBF numbers are PURE statistics!
Twayne wrote: In , Ken Blake, MVP typed: On Mon, 9 Nov 2009 11:22:34 -0600, "BillW50" wrote: Actually if you can believe the specs of SSDs, a manufacture claims the MTBF is 227 years. And HDD are only less than 37 years. I'm always reluctant to believe MTBF claims. They may be correct, but with numbers as high as 227 years, I have no confidence in them. MTBFs are a little like statistics; you can make them say different things at different times. Folks should remember the calcs for MTBFs are usually for laboratory conditions of a controlled environment, etc. etc.. I wouldn't expect to see an SSD drive last 200 years in use any more than I would a HDD last 37 years in use. Whether it's alpha migration or physical parts wear, neither comes out very "real" in MTBF calcs. Grease dries, irradiation degrades and all that good stuff. I've never seen a single instance of a product making its MTBF numbers, have you? MTBF is really only useful (sometimes) as a comparison factor, not real numbers. Like in the G's tests, you have no idea how the products were dropped if they don't say so and there are many different ways of speccing how to calculate (not measure) them. I used to have to do a lot of MTBF on my designs and I hated it; it felt like lying to the customers because marketing always hyped it as how long the product would last, which it definitely is not. You CAN do actual-use calcs for MTBFs, but it's expensive and time consuming so all most engineers do is use the means of the various parts within a product. It has its uses, but not in advertising, marketing or anything for the public, in reality. Cheers, Twayne` |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
Bob I wrote on Tue, 10 Nov 2009 07:45:33 -0600:
Actually, HD MTBF numbers are PURE statistics! Actually if less than 37 years holds true, I have some HDD that still have half of their life to go. And they are still working just fine the last time I checked. ;-) -- Bill Asus EEE PC 702G4 ~ 2GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC Xandros Linux (build 2007-10-19 13:03) |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
Twayne wrote on Mon, 9 Nov 2009 11:31:23 -0500:
From what I've read it'll happen over a relatively short period of time compared to mechanicals but you also get some extra time out of it because it quits using the bad "sectors" and moves over to other good ones. That goes on until there's no space left unless you're watching it. I know of some SSD drives in a CT business (UTC) where my son works, where they're being used but not on the system drives; so far not a problem anywhere. They're surprisingly cheap bought in quantity which tells us, I think, prime time isn't too far off. They're using 64 Gig drives right now; really tiny in size! Twayne` Actually all SSD that I know of uses wear leveling. This increases the number of writes, but the whole mass storage is written to evenly. Thus at the end of its life, the whole thing just dies. Too bad they don't add a counter or something to let you know how far you are in its life cycle. ;-) -- Bill Asus EEE PC 702G4 ~ 2GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC Xandros Linux (build 2007-10-19 13:03) |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
In ,
Bob I typed: Actually, HD MTBF numbers are PURE statistics! I was trying to remember that very name! lol, thanks! Twayne` Twayne wrote: In , Ken Blake, MVP typed: On Mon, 9 Nov 2009 11:22:34 -0600, "BillW50" wrote: Actually if you can believe the specs of SSDs, a manufacture claims the MTBF is 227 years. And HDD are only less than 37 years. I'm always reluctant to believe MTBF claims. They may be correct, but with numbers as high as 227 years, I have no confidence in them. MTBFs are a little like statistics; you can make them say different things at different times. Folks should remember the calcs for MTBFs are usually for laboratory conditions of a controlled environment, etc. etc.. I wouldn't expect to see an SSD drive last 200 years in use any more than I would a HDD last 37 years in use. Whether it's alpha migration or physical parts wear, neither comes out very "real" in MTBF calcs. Grease dries, irradiation degrades and all that good stuff. I've never seen a single instance of a product making its MTBF numbers, have you? MTBF is really only useful (sometimes) as a comparison factor, not real numbers. Like in the G's tests, you have no idea how the products were dropped if they don't say so and there are many different ways of speccing how to calculate (not measure) them. I used to have to do a lot of MTBF on my designs and I hated it; it felt like lying to the customers because marketing always hyped it as how long the product would last, which it definitely is not. You CAN do actual-use calcs for MTBFs, but it's expensive and time consuming so all most engineers do is use the means of the various parts within a product. It has its uses, but not in advertising, marketing or anything for the public, in reality. Cheers, Twayne` |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
In message , BillW50
writes: [] Actually all SSD that I know of uses wear leveling. This increases the number of writes, but the whole mass storage is written to evenly. Thus at the end of its life, the whole thing just dies. Too bad they don't add a counter or something to let you know how far you are in its life cycle. ;-) Do they not have the equivalent of SMART? -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G.5AL-IS-P--Ch++(p)Ar@T0H+Sh0!:`)DNAf ** http://www.soft255.demon.co.uk/G6JPG-PC/JPGminPC.htm for ludicrously outdated thoughts on PCs. ** Britain is still a class-ridden society. As soon as a man opens his mouth, we can tell in what sort of school he missed his education. (George Mikes, "How to be Decadent" [1977].) |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
In ,
J. P. Gilliver (John) typed on Fri, 13 Nov 2009 07:27:08 +0000: In message , BillW50 writes: Actually all SSD that I know of uses wear leveling. This increases the number of writes, but the whole mass storage is written to evenly. Thus at the end of its life, the whole thing just dies. Too bad they don't add a counter or something to let you know how far you are in its life cycle. ;-) Do they not have the equivalent of SMART? Actually they do use SMART. Although SMART doesn't have SSD useful information as a standard yet. Programs like Hard Disk Sentinel does help in this regard though. As it keeps a running tally on how much is written to the SSD. -- Bill Asus EEE PC 702G8 ~ 2GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC Windows XP SP2 |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
I'd be very interested in going SSD as my main drive, but the lifespan is
always what scares me. I want my data to be relatively safe. Being that the technology is newer than a hard drive is what worries me since I have no experience with it. SMART attributes aren't always a good measure of a drive I'm told. Different programs read differently. I'm monitoring my drives at work and they list 33% health left. I still had a Windows 98 machine running here up until a few months ago with the original hard drive. "WMB" wrote in message ... If speed is your objective, and cost is not a deterrent, image your current drive, install a SSD HD, re-install the image. "Chris Prillo" did and says its a slam bam for performance. I would sure like to hear from an average joe who tried it. "Ant" wrote in message ... Um, nice poem? On 8/16/2009 2:58 PM PT, db typed: there is a third party maker that makes a ready boost version for xp. it's about 50 bucks. ------------- they really act like the hibernation feature and you require usb flash drives that are twice the size of your ram to provide the full benefit. also, flash drives come in two flavors: those that are ready boost ready and those that are not. ------------- one day microsoft will hire the smart guy who develops a rom level hibernation. but it will be a long time til then. -- "Though your enemy is the size of an ant, look upon him as an elephant." --Danish /\___/\ / /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @ http://antfarm.ma.cx (Personal Web Site) | |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL): http://aqfl.net \ _ / Nuke ANT from e-mail address: NT ( ) or Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer. |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
Speed up my Windows XP Pro. SP3 with Flash USB drives/drives?
In ,
shawn typed on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 14:34:14 -0500: I'd be very interested in going SSD as my main drive, but the lifespan is always what scares me. I want my data to be relatively safe. Being that the technology is newer than a hard drive is what worries me since I have no experience with it. Hi Shawn! MTBF for SSD is 227 years. While hard drives MTBF is 37 years. SMART attributes aren't always a good measure of a drive I'm told. Different programs read differently. I'm monitoring my drives at work and they list 33% health left. I still had a Windows 98 machine running here up until a few months ago with the original hard drive. Google research showed that SMART is unreliable. I take it as a small gauge. But not something you should depend on 100%. As 40% of failures are not detected by SMART. -- Bill Gateway MX6124 ('06 era) 1 of 3 - Windows XP SP2 |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|