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Why Size Matters For Your SSD Purchase

Vigile writes "Performance analysis on solid state drives is still coming into clarity as more manufacturers enter the fold and more of the drives find their way into users' hands. While Intel's dominance in the SSD market was once undoubted, newer garbage collection methods from Indilinx and Samsung are now balancing performance across the the major players. What hasn't been discussed in great detail yet is the effect that drive capacity can have on overall performance. Some smaller drives (64GB versus 128GB) will actually use fewer data channels from the controller chip and thus will have lower transfer speeds. The article compares drives using controllers from Indilinx, Samsung and Intel." Note that PCPer greedily spans this review over 12 pages. Next time maybe they can keep it down to something more reasonable.

175 comments

  1. Size. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    6.40 inches ought to be enough for anybody.

    1. Re:Size. by BronsCon · · Score: 4, Funny

      I don't know whether to mod this troll, offtopic, flamebait, or funny, so I'm replying instead. Well played.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    2. Re:Size. by BronsCon · · Score: 3, Funny

      Wow. I wasn't karma-whoring with that post, but I'll take it.

      Now... the post I made below this one... THAT was karma-whoring.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    3. Re:Size. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      flaccid or erect?

    4. Re:Size. by cparker15 · · Score: 0

      Funny mods don't affect your karma... you insensitive clod?

      --
      Have you driven a fnord... lately?

      You must wait a little bit before using this resource; please try again later.

    5. Re:Size. by BronsCon · · Score: 1, Informative

      Click the score. Insightful mods do affect karma.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    6. Re:Size. by Locke2005 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I didn't know Bill G. posted to slashdot! How does Melinda feel about your 6.4 inches?

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    7. Re:Size. by Dragonslicer · · Score: 2, Funny

      6.40 inches ought to be enough for anybody.

      I know there's a "your mom" joke here somewhere...

    8. Re:Size. by CopaceticOpus · · Score: 1

      The funniest thing is that someone modded it informative.

    9. Re:Size. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except your mom. (apologies, you walked into that one)

    10. Re:Size. by Loopy1492 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure... I mean do they even MAKE 6.40-inch-long Super Star Destroyers???

      --
      I deliminate with tabs. Get used to it.
    11. Re:Size. by DJLuc1d · · Score: 1

      whoever tagged it "thatswhatshesaid" is awesome

    12. Re:Size. by Loopy1492 · · Score: 1

      The Emperor is probably spinning in his grave!!! That is, of course, unless you're a douche and your think Expanded Universe is canon.

      --
      I deliminate with tabs. Get used to it.
    13. Re:Size. by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      That's not what SHE said...

    14. Re:Size. by kramerd · · Score: 1

      So how is anonymous coward's karma these days?

    15. Re:Size. by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 3, Funny

      That maneuver is called the "human Klein bottle."

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    16. Re:Size. by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      That's awesome. That's just... Awesome. There are no other words to describe the fact that you took the time to think up that reply.

      You, sir, are a winner. Your prize? One Internet.

      On a side note, I recently purchased an ACME Klein Bottle. You really should get one.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    17. Re:Size. by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't know, I never post as AC.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    18. Re:Size. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how is anonymous coward's karma these days?

      Excellent, when I log in, and I am almost always at 15 moderator points.

      I usually never login, though. Too much trouble.

  2. The short story by symbolset · · Score: 5, Informative

    Intel X25-M 160GB totally dominates in IOPS and doesn't suffer in the other categories. A clean win.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:The short story by MoOsEb0y · · Score: 2, Funny

      Price.

    2. Re:The short story by maxume · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They all meet the definition of 'blisteringly fast' when compared to my current disk, but they also all meet the definition of 'cost more than I want to pay'.

      I guess it is still useful to figure out which one provides the best value.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:The short story by spinkham · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I bought a 30 GB OCZ vertex for my boot/application drive, and use a few 1TB drives in RAID for bulk storage. Best of both worlds.
      Yes, the 30BG one isn't quite as fast as the 120GB one, but it's still 10x faster at loading apps and 3x faster at booting Ubuntu then my past HD.

      --
      Blessed are the pessimists, for they have made backups.
    4. Re:The short story by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Actually, Intel has priced this one very aggressively. I think they're seeing their chance to cease the storage market, since it's now chips like CPUs and RAID that they also have plenty experience with from motherboard/server RAID solutions. The way this is going, the HDD manufacturers should be very worried. Particularly in the business market I think a reasonable 80GB SSD is plenty capacity, that's damn many powerpoints and time == salary. In fact, with Intel broadening in every direction and SoC systems nearing usability for the laptop/desktop I think we're heading for the Intel PC, full circle 30 years after the IBM PC.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:The short story by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Unlike Seagate, Intel still has a R&D department :)
      http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/seagate_suffers_setback_ssd_development

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    6. Re:The short story by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      While Intel has had many triumphs of engineering, don't forget that Intel has had significant setbacks in its history too.

      Look how much they've sunk into their Itanium and all it's done for them in return, it might as well have been just a marketing program to spook the heavy iron architectures into closing up shop. They certainly didn't manage to make that research pay back for itself. Intel also made several RISC chips of their own that didn't do nearly what they expected.

      They also tried to make an LCOS (liquid crystal on silicon) chip and display engine for projection displays, that had to be canned.

      The Netburst microarchitectures aren't outright failures, but they were pretty inefficient and didn't scale all that well over time.

    7. Re:The short story by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Actually, Intel has priced this one very aggressively. I think they're seeing their chance to cease the storage market [...]

      Well done typo: they're trying to take control of ("seize") the storage market; and, they're trying to eliminate their competitors from being in business ("cease").

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  3. Multi-Page = Horrible by PktLoss · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The odds of me reading page 2 of any article not paginated sensibly (reading a single page should take several minutes) are probably around 10%. Page 5? never.

    I'll just be uninformed until information is published with a sensible pagination system. I'm okay with that.

    1. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by clyde_cadiddlehopper · · Score: 3, Insightful
      >Note that PCPer greedily spans this review over 12 pages.

      Sad economic truth: Free articles aren't free. 12 pages = 12 advert refreshes.

      --
      Obi-Wan: "I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were sudden
    2. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Phillup · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Sad economic truth: Free articles aren't free. 12 pages = 12 advert refreshes.

      There are adds on those pages?

      NoScript for the win!

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    3. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      All Flash = I see none of them.

    4. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Hurricane78 · · Score: 0

      You mean AdBlock Plus, of course. Or how does your NoScript block text ads? :)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    5. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Vigile · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't want to turn this into the eternal "free web content ain't free" debate - but it's not. I run the site and yes this article might have been condensed to 9-10 pages more reasonably, but the author laid out the pages before filling in the content and was in a rush. Sorry.

      As for those that block ads, etc. I realize WHY you do it but I would hope that once in a while you think of people that run these types of sites: we employee 8 people on pcper.com and we charge you NOTHING to read the content, etc. These 8 people depend on the ad revenue to live, function and continue writing.

      Just a thought.

    6. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by zero0ne · · Score: 1

      I don't see any ads on the pages, and that is with vanilla IE 8.

      12 pages isn't a big deal when it is used to separate 50+ images.

      I bet it's spanned across all those pages simply to try and somehow get a better pagerank.

    7. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      As for those that block ads, etc. I realize WHY you do it but I would hope that once in a while you think of people that run these types of sites: we employee 8 people on pcper.com and we charge you NOTHING to read the content, etc. These 8 people depend on the ad revenue to live, function and continue writing.

      Stop using 3rd party hosts. Learn to respect my browser's "no animations" setting rather than circumventing it. Don't use tracking cookies or bugs. Stop speading malware. And if you are just an innocent victim of your industry cohorts pissing in the well, then build a new advertising model that doesn't rely on these same asshole companies. Oh, but you won't do it because it is easier to complain and feel entitled. Block my ass if you don't want me - your shit content can be found elsewhere or safely ignored.

      This is not a rant on your mild comment. Reality is that internet advertising is so thoroughly fucked up and tarnished that you ought to start over now and be ahead of the game. I recommend developing a parellel site with similar or identical content but using a non-3rd-party model.

    8. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sad economic truth: Free articles aren't free. 12 pages = 12 advert refreshes.

      There are adds on those pages?

      NoScript for the win!

      You must be a user of AdBlock Plus since you aren't seeing any "adds" [sic]!

    9. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Reapman · · Score: 1

      This.

      Personally I don't get the big deal with seeing ad's. It's not like they're going to burn my eyes out. Now if the site uses some obtrusive blocking my view or sound clips or some such thing, THEN I'll block their ad's. But if it's some banner sitting somewhere quietly, it doesn't hurt ME to see it, so why not let it exist? If that's all it takes to show support and allow a site to exist and provide me with some value added service, what's the deal?

      Granted I didn't actually RTFA since reading about stuff I can't afford makes for a sad panda :[

    10. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Vigile · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This doesn't make any sense actually. 60% or more of our ads are hosted on-site at ads.pcper.com. The others are hosted at Google Ad Manager service - widely regarded as one of the fastest and least obtrusive. And we are simply using that as a manager for our own in-house sold advertising. We have no malware but yah there are some cookies that are used in order to show you DIFFERENT ads rather than the same ones over and over if possible.

    11. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Phillup · · Score: 1

      Or how does your NoScript block text ads?

      Well, either I'm lucky... or the ads are pulled in by javascript.

      I just pulled the page again to double check, and I don't see any ads.

      Which is pretty much what I always get unless the ad is a part of the html from the page I pull... because there is nothing else allowed.

      Looking at the page source I see something from Google AdSense, among others... but they are all on my black list.

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    12. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Maniacal · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't turn off ads. I even click on them once in a while. Found Splunk that way. But I can't agree with the splitting of stories to multiple pages just for ad revenue. If you generate great content, and don't annoy people, maybe your stories will get millions of hits and putting them on one page will still generate great revenue.

      On a side note, I think that Slashdot should really consider throwing around some muscle here. As everyone knows, getting a link on Slashdot's front page is a great boost for any site. If Slashdot editors, when reviewing a story, sent a nice e-mail stating "our policy is to not link to stories when we determine that the story is spanned over multiple pages to boost ad revenue. If you would like our story to run, with a link to your page, you'll need to modify it or provide a modified version for our readers".

      Wanna bet on whether or not they would comply?

      --
      MG
    13. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by mcgrew · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I run the site and yes this article might have been condensed to 9-10 pages more reasonably

      That's still idiotic. I refuse to hit page 2 of ANY site that has a bunch of idiotically short pages, and what's more, I refuse to return when I see one. Better you should grow your readership; you're better off having ten people read a one page article than have one person read a ten page article, because nine of those ten people won't be back.

      Life's to short to put up with bullshit like that, sorry. Come back when you can at least make an attempt to not annoy me -- you're not Microsoft. You're one out of hundreds of far better laid out sites that will have the same info.

      Oh, and a thank you to kdawson for warning us.

    14. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This doesn't make any sense actually. 60% or more of our ads are hosted on-site at ads.pcper.com. The others are hosted at Google Ad Manager service - widely regarded as one of the fastest and least obtrusive. And we are simply using that as a manager for our own in-house sold advertising. We have no malware but yah there are some cookies that are used in order to show you DIFFERENT ads rather than the same ones over and over if possible.

      You do address my comment indirectly. It matters not if you don't do the "bad things". By "pissing in the well" I mean to state that the whole game is tainted. Adblock plus is *THE* way, the best innoculation, against all these. I pulled up PCPER.COM and saw text ads. This means you haven't caught the ire of Adblock+/noscript. If your complaint is that there are MORE ads I should be seeing, then you are really quite insane.

      I pay for my bandwidth and choose what to download. That is the model of the internet. Also, showing me "DIFFERENT" ads is NOT a benefit to myself. In all likelihood, I will go back to your site looking for that ad content - if it indeed struck my fancy - and it will NOT be found. That is an ad FAIL. There is a cost to dynamic content as well.

      You can place your content in "ads.pcper.com" if you want to keep a leacher like myself off. The truth is, people like me still make you money so you don't block us. I wish all our customers were exclusive to us and bought $1,000,000 per year. The reality is we need to surive on people spending one-to-two orders of magnitude less. They don't need to "think about us" when they don't buy from us or negotiate a lower price. That is their fucking job.

    15. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by beckett · · Score: 1, Troll

      Your needs to make revenue from ads server side has absolutely NO bearing on what software i run on my client. that includes adblock software. you might be pissed off, but frankly, you don't have the right to determine if i watch ads or not. from my personal computer, I do. ads on eyeballs are like millionaires throwing rocks at your head.

      thank you for your wonderful article, but understand you've marred your research with 12 pages of advertisements. i've published hundreds of pages of research and none of them had any banner ads on them at all.

    16. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

      We have no malware but yah there are some cookies that are used in order to show you DIFFERENT ads rather than the same ones over and over if possible.

      Sorry to be blunt, but that's pretty fucking dumb. Because if, on the remotest of remote chances, an advertisement actually broke through all the natural blindspots I have developed over time, I have one chance to click on the ad. Next time I go to the page, it's changed.

      When I walk past a bus stop, or drive down the highway, the ads are the same over a period of time. Partly that's because it's more expensive to rotate ads with traditional media. But it's also because advertising takes repeated exposure due to people subconsciously, instinctively trying to block it out.

      The technology is there to make ads more static. Have the rotate script on a one-week cycle and charge more for the placement. You can even use whatever heuristics you (or the ad company) likes to present different users with different static ads based on browsing history or URL "referer" or the like.

      This isn't fucking rocket science. Stop annoying your users or they will simply find their own ways to circumvent your only means of revenue.

    17. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 page, 0 clicks, 0 income
      12 pages, 0 clicks, 0 income
      what's the difference?

    18. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by publiclurker · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well said. I only block ads that are obtrusive like that. I've actually purchased thousands of dollars of services for my company based on an ad in Opera, so I actually find a lot of them useful. However, if you pop up a window over what I'm trying to read or start up sound clips when I'm browsing late at night, then you get your ads blocked.

    19. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Do you get paid per click or per impression? Due to ads screwing up in the '90s and early 2000s most people won't click on ads, no matter how nice you think they are, most people won't click on ads. Myself the only adblocking that I do is I block a few webservers in my /etc/hosts file, but I don't click on ads, I would imagine that there are a lot of other people with the same feelings. Plus there are a lot of others who have crappy connections or reading on a mobile device so ads are annoying because they take a long time to load.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    20. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      We have no malware but yah there are some cookies that are used in order to show you DIFFERENT ads rather than the same ones over and over if possible.

      Bullshit. Pick them at random (and look up the coupon collector problem).

    21. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > yes this article might have been condensed to 9-10 pages more reasonably

      Seriously? This is HTML -- any linear information should be presented in ONE PAGE. You can run ads down the margins if you like, or even in between paragraphs (clearly delineated from the content, of course).

      Sites that use the multi-page game annoy me a lot, and sites that do it and do not also provide an "all in one page" link annoy me to the point that I'll never return.

      Too bad, because I'm pretty sure I'm right in the middle of your target audience.

    22. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by anarche · · Score: 1

      Vigile wins this argument by default. If you wish to be taken seriously, log in AC.

      +1 for internet advertising?? wierd..

      --
      Wait! Whats a sig?
    23. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by AllynM · · Score: 1

      To those having a beef with our article page count:

      - We have one bench per page (like everybody else), we do 7 benches.
      - We have an intro and conclusion (like everybody else).
      - I include several discussion pages and evaluate fragmentation-over-time and other important topics related to SSD performance, making the SSD pieces a few pages longer than the HDD pieces.

      The additional content takes considerably more time to properly evaluate and discuss, but that is us going the extra mile for our readers. It's why people follow our site, and it's why I write for them. Our general rule of thumb is that a page should not go too far past the page side bars, which makes sense visually and is in-line with every other site I've seen out there. I could have rolled the testbed page in with the preceding page, but that page was already quite long due to additional content present. Feel free to use the page selector at the bottom of each page to jump around the article - that's what it's there for.

      If you want some random smattering of benches with no analysis or additional editorial content, you're reading the wrong article, folks.

      Allyn Malventano
      Storage Editor, PC Perspective

      --
      this sig was brought to you by the letter /.
    24. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Years ago I found that the flashy adds screaming for attention made it difficult for me to read the content of more and more websites. I really, REALLY have trouble concentrating on a text when there is movement around it, and it's bloody annoying when following a link because it seems interesting only to find I can't manage to take in the contents. It really was that bad for me, the adds killed more and more websites. I don't think the purpose of those web sites is not to be read. So I installed AdBlock. A while later I installed NoScript and found it blocks the type of ads that give me trouble pretty effectively, and I dumped AdBlock. I'm still using NoScript. Not just for ads, but also because so many vulnerabilities in browsers are based on scripting.

      I didn't RTFA, but I took a look at your website and allowed scripts/flash. The two ads at the top are pretty annoying, but your layout makes it easy to scroll them out of sight. Much better than putting them left and right of the text. But I still block them by default because I can't distinguish between your site layout and others.

      Some sites have text ads that don't depend on JavaScript to be shown. Not only do they not bother me, I'm even much more inclined to follow the links just because they don't shout at me. I can sympathise with someone who'se capable of showing some modesty, I tend to ignore people shouting at me.

      You said you realise why people block ads, so I'm probably not telling anything new. But if you realise that at least part of the people who block ads do so not because they object to advertising, but because they have trouble being shouted at, why don't you include text ads on your page? Why don't you tell the party providing the ads that they should provide a static version of the ad that doesn't depend on JavaScript or Flash in case the browser doesn't support it. Which ads are shown and registration of clicks can be handled server side by the ad provider.

      I think you're complaining to the wrong people. Just a thought ;-)

    25. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went to the page and unfortunatly there are no ads for me to see. Probably because of NoScript. I am really not against advertising. This is why I don't use Adblock or something similar. I am just against this whole user tracking stuff.

      People like me would be more open to advertising if we don't have the feeling of getting screwed just for browsing your site. Being stalked around the web doesn't feel very comfortable for me.

    26. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Vigile · · Score: 1

      Slight misunderstanding here - we have the same ads that cycle so you are likely to see the same ad if you hit the page enough times. But advertisers know (and have proven) that if the content remains TOO static it is more easily overlooked.

    27. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Vigile · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is obviously coming from the view of someone who doesn't create content for a living. "I pay for my bandwidth and choose what to download. That is the model of the internet." is the grossest slight on the words net neutrality I have seen in a long, long time. You pay for bandwidth, but you didn't pay me, right? By your thought process then you should only be getting content from your bw provider and no one else.

      Look, we provide our content to you, the reader, 100% free. Watching ads does not make it NOT free. If you want people to create good content, MOST OF THE TIME, they are going to want to get paid for it EVENTUALLY. For us, that is ads. The other option is subscription based. If you have a way better third option, you'll be a millionaire by the time you reply.

      The alternative is for us to BLOCK everyone that blocks our ads - a lot of sites are doing that now. We don't plan on doing it though. To me, its a simple thing to ask: we can continue to make high quality content if you allow us to use your eyes for a split second on that ad.

    28. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't mind your need for ad's that pay for us being able to read the content.

      But at websites that are tedious or annoying to view, I leave quickly and avoid in the future. Rarely can I not find info I really want elsewhere.

      You may get a few people to click through all 12 pages, but I would guess you are *not getting* far more pages. And not only have I not given you the page views on this article, but you've taught me not to go back. Don't kill the goose.

      You do have lots of company though, any site heavily dependent on slow flash images, I also leave quickly.
      too much info, too little time.

      Just a thought

    29. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Vigile · · Score: 1

      Sure, I don't have the right to determine if you watch ads or not. But do I have the right to make sure you see ads in order to see my content?

    30. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by GaryOlson · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh, let me count the script domains NoScript is blocking:
      1)pricegrabber.com
      2)skimlinks.com
      3)googleadservices.com
      4)quantserv.com
      5)tribalfusion.com
      6)pcper.com

      You far exceeded my acceptable level of third party scripts by 400%. I don't care whether those scripts are advertisements or statistics or revenue generation or whatever. I do not consider your choices wise. I will block your advertisements until such time as you learn to understand your market.

      --
      Every mans' island needs an ocean; choose your ocean carefully.
    31. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The excess pagination really does make your site hard to use. I looked at the first page of the article and one or two of the middle pages but couldn't deal with the thought of looking at them all. Also I don't think you did any small-block random write test like Crystalmark. Your benchmarks seemed like a bogus attempt to "level the playing field" when the reality is that Intel still crushes everyone (hopefully that is changing).

      Lots of commercial sites with quality contents show ads but not THAT many ads. And most have a single page "print" link that allows getting all the pages at once.

      Anyway your site is just not worth sweating about being blocked from. If I get blocked (or even if I don't), I'll get along fine without reading your site.

      I'd frankly rather just pay some cash and view the site presented sensibly (i.e. complete article on one page, or complete set of all of the week's posts posts in one download) with no ads. The main obstacle is that I'd want to pay anonymously in order to be sure to not be marketed to as a result of subscribing.

    32. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      As for those that block ads, etc. I realize WHY you do it but I would hope that once in a while you think of people that run these types of sites: we employee 8 people on pcper.com and we charge you NOTHING to read the content, etc.

      As for those of you with ads all over your sites, etc. I realize WHY you do it, but I would hope that once in a while you would think of the readers who have to be bombarded with your bullshit and slowed down pageloads and/or go to extraordinary measures to avoid it, who will never click on any of your stupid ads, and who are going to continue to block these ads at every opportunity. You say your site cannot exist without ads? Good riddance.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    33. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by WNight · · Score: 0

      "I pay for my bandwidth and choose what to download. That is the model of the internet." is the grossest slight on the words net neutrality I have seen in a long, long time.

      No. You're reading it wrong.

      It's my connection, and I choose carefully what I wish to download. I pay per kb (very little but it adds up quickly) and download at 4k/s usually. Blocking the ads on your site probably saves three-quarters of the bandwidth and most of the loading time.

      I don't think this pays you, nor would I want my ISP kicking anything back to you. I may have read your site but nothing about that obligates me to pay you - I may not have liked to article or merely not thought it was worth paying for.

      You couldn't possible understand the latency in loading a page over crappy cellular. To expect me to go through that more than once is madness, more than ten times is some sick fucking joke. NEVER going to happen.

      Go ahead and block ad-blockers though. Please. I just makes telling if your site has anything to offer me that much easier. Whenever I hit a site that doesn't work, for lack of non-javascript or non-flash fallbacks, because it's crashed, or because it blocks me I simply pop over to a google and have a new link to that topic (though not at the same site) in seconds (plus my insane loading time...).

      Do you want a model that will work? So does the world. But one that will NOT is expecting me to view your content in the way YOU choose.

      First manufacturers of CDs learned, but you were not a music publisher so you did not learn. Then manufacturers of DVDs learned, but you were not in the movie industry and did not learn. Then software publishers learned, but you didn't write software and did not learn. Then paper publishers learned, but you were on the web and did not learn. Then web content providers learned, and you have a chance to catch on: DRM (taking control from the customer) is HATED and always cracked.

    34. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1
      Just curious: could you check your web logs and see how many clickthroughs from slashdot actually read the article to its 10 page end?

      And another thought: maybe the author shouldn't be in such a rush. This lives up to the stereotype that free content is worth what you pay for it. Lame excuses don't cut it.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    35. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by beckett · · Score: 1

      Not when it's rendered on my computer. those are my CPU cycles, and that's my screen it's displayed on. it's actually a big hassle to click through all those pages, and as other people have pointed out, it's HTML. you're free to lay it out any way you want, and I can apply whatever filters or plugins to make your site finally readable to me.

      it is actually because of this slashdot posting I found out about pagination firefox plugins. A lot of the Slashdot comments are about your formatting, partially becuase kdawson mentioned it, and partially I feel your layout is anachronistic and irritating. This has nothing to do with your content, which i find well researched.

      Someone feel free to mod me troll again, but this is how I honestly feel about online ads. Next you'll be questioning the ethics of me using a pop-up blocker.

    36. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by bytesex · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, your premise is wrong. It all starts with: you are under no obligation to put free content out there. Should you, in spite of this, choose to do so yet, you shouldn't be surprised if people leech it. If you disagree with this, then I'm sure (since you're posting on Slashdot), that you have the technological acumen to invent and implement and popularize a protocol that will provide content to people, all the while forcing them to see it as you want them to see it - including ads.

      --
      Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
    37. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Someone should write a Firefox extension that depaginates articles. I.e. concatenates page n onto the end of page n-1.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    38. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      The alternative is for us to BLOCK everyone that blocks our ads - a lot of sites are doing that now. We don't plan on doing it though.

      How would you do this?

      One option would be to put something on the server that only lets IP addresses that download from ads.pcper.com dowload the article, the others would get redirected to a nag site. Or you could let them download a bit and then throttle the connection speed unless they download from ads.pcper.com.

      Or what about forcing people to answer questions based on the adverts in return for reading the article? Hmm, designing something like this would be good fun and it would make me notorious on the internets.

      I've seen shame text - someone on b3ta had a site that put text behind the adverts - if you block them you get to read text saying "thanks for using AdBlock, now my family won't have food to eat this month". Reddit does this too - you see banners that say "thanks for not using AdBlock". Personally I don't bother to block ads these days because the pages load almost instantly on my internet connection even with them.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    39. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Jyms · · Score: 1

      I understand the need for advertising. I wish I did not have to block ads. I understand that it is counter productive, though I don't notice most ads and have hardly ever clicked on one. The ones I do notice tends to be the reason that I do block ads. The problem is the trend to over complicate things.

      I know most websites are run by people with no technical skills who use off the shelf products, but do I really have to visit 20 sites to read 5 lines of text?

      Take Slashdot.org for example. There is a little check box on top that says that I can disable advertising. I have never done it though, even when I don't have an ad blocker installed. However, I use the same laptop with different Firefox profiles at home and work. At home, slashdot.org forces me to download something from c.fsdn.com that causes Firefox to use 100% CPU every now and then. It does not do this at work. Probably some plugin that causes the problem. I have never bothered to try and find out why. I just put 127.0.0.1 c.fsdn.com in my hosts file. Problem solved. The site renders "correctly" and without freezing at work and looks nice, sharp and "clean" at home.

      If I ever need a "feature" provided by c.fsdn.com all I have to do is uncomment and reload. I object to sites hijacking my browser. Unfortunately this leads to an overreaction that means that I will rather block something useful/good than to have my browser hijacked.

      I am not suggesting that we go back to static html, but I wish people would simplify things a bit.

    40. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by zrq · · Score: 1

      First, let me say thank you for responding to this thread. It is useful to have a honest and informative debate about this.

      I often start my day by reading the SlashDot front page. I pick a couple of summaries that look interesting and normally open both the SlashDot page and the article it links to in separate tabs.
      However, if the SlashDot summary mentions multiple pages, login required, excessive advertising etc. I only open the SlashDot page and read the comments to see if it is worth reading TFA later. In this case Kdawson's warning meant I only opened the SlashDot page.
      I got enough information from the comments to decide that it probably wasn't worth opening TFA right now.
      I am interested in SSD devices, but the number of negative comments about the site readability put me off.

      As I read more of the comments, your post as the site owner and the subsequent discussion actually became more interesting than the article itself. So, I did visit your site - not to find out more about SSD devices, but to see what all the fuss was about.
      The immediate impression I got is that this site isn't aimed at me, it is aimed a kids putting together games machines. I've visited many similar sites and my normal reaction would be to just skip it and move on to somewhere else.
      This time I stayed on the site and tried to read the article because I was curious to find out how intrusive the advertisements actually were.

      The information you are presenting is detailed and technical but I found it very difficult to concentrate on the text because the flashing animated advertisements kept jumping around in my peripheral vision.
      I looked at a few pages but it was too tiring/irritating to actually bother with reading all of the pages.
      For me it isn't the number of advertisements, their position or content. The problem was the flashing animated advertisements vying for my attention meant I couldn't actually concentrate on the article I came to read.
      The insistent animated advertisements actually worked against themselves. In trying to read article text I had to actively concentrate on excluding them - so I have no idea what they were actually trying to sell. My own experience is that if I do actually register what company or product the advertisement is for, I am left with a negative impression of them - I remember the irritation factor more than the benefits the advertisement was trying to portray.

      Last but not least - I opened your site in a separate tab, and then flipped back to the SlashDot page to compare it with what people were saying. At that point I noticed that the animations were taking up so much cpu that scrolling the SlashDot page was slow and clunky. The only way to restore my web browser to a usable state was to close the tab with your site.
      This is important, because when reading a story or article with links to other sites I normally open all of the associated pages in tabs and flip between them to compare and understand what they are saying.
      The animated advertisements meant I visited your site once, read a couple of pages and then closed the tab.

      Based on my experience, unless it was providing really important information that no one else provided, then I wouldn't visit it again.
      My apologies, I hope you don't take this personally, it was meant as an unbiased report of user experience.

    41. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      You guys must be on PCP if you think anybody is going to bother with 12 pointless pages, no matter the excuse. Why the hell do you need more than one page, anyway? Just put discrete ad banners between paragraphs.

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    42. Re:Multi-Page = Horrible by Meski · · Score: 1

      Happy to read adsense, but the multi-coloured flash atrocities? Pass.

  4. take a stand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Note that PCPer greedily spans this review over 12 pages. Next time maybe they can keep it down to something more reasonable.

    They're not going to be more reasonable until we take a stand. Vote down the story, and make sure not to click the links.

    1. Re:take a stand by BronsCon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I use adblock primarily for these sites.

      When I come across a site that doesn't do this bullshit, I make sure to allow their ads.

      Hell, Slashdot is giving me the option of disabling advertising just by clicking a checkbox; I'm not doing it.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    2. Re:take a stand by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

      Yeah it gave me the option of blocking ads as well, when I noticed that I white-listed /.in ABP.

    3. Re:take a stand by maxume · · Score: 1

      That's alright, it shows me the ads even though I do have that box checked.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:take a stand by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      Try turning off NoScript.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    5. Re:take a stand by GravityStar · · Score: 1

      Ever thought slashdot perhaps sniffed your use of ABP, and then 'gave' you the option of turning off ads?

      This is, in fact, the /first/ thing that popped into my mind when I saw that checkbox to disable advertising. It would be a clever way to turn people who block ads into people who watch (your) ads.

    6. Re:take a stand by maxume · · Score: 1

      I'm not running NoScript (though I do have the classic comment system turned on; it seems that they are not actively maintaining it, but some changes to the new system leak through (but this is only a guess)).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    7. Re:take a stand by bcmm · · Score: 1

      For me, it means I get Google's text ads instead of Flash, which is nice as they are not really annoying and occasionally relevant.

      --
      # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama
      Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
    8. Re:take a stand by jittles · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nope, that's not the case at all. I can turn adds off too and I don't even run adblock. If a site has too many ads for my taste, I just close it never to return again.

    9. Re:take a stand by GeorgeS · · Score: 1

      I have ABP disabled for Slashdot.org and I have the option to disable ads too but, I haven't checked the box and I don't see any ads.I always figured I screwed up some setting in ABP or Firefox but, now I see I'm not the only one experiencing this. Very strange that they would disable the ads just because we installed ABP.

      --
      "I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than have to have a frontal lobotomy."
    10. Re:take a stand by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      I use a hosts file to block ad servers, it gets probably 95% of the junk out there. As a bonus, the ads aren't even downloaded to my machine, so all my bandwidth goes to the page I'm browsing.

      And since my internet at work is way over-capacity, that's a good thing. There are a number of lists out there, give it a shot. It's the geeky way to do it. ;)

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    11. Re:take a stand by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      I wonder if it would be possible to make an extension that detected paginated sites and combined them down into a single page. Even if detection is too dificult I would think that you would be able to do one that would be a single button click for the user.

    12. Re:take a stand by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      Not that it actually works - I have the box checked and now it shows an ad above a message saying ads are disabled.

    13. Re:take a stand by Ironica · · Score: 1

      As posted above by Ben Jackson, there is.

      --
      Don't you wish your girlfriend was a geek like me?
    14. Re:take a stand by Maniacal · · Score: 1

      I have that checkbox too. Didn't turn them off. Slashdot ads have never bothered me and if it helps them keep the lights on, so be it.

      --
      MG
    15. Re:take a stand by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Point them to a webserver under your control and have it serve up _your_ "ads". Could be reminders or "random quotes".

      Back when I administered a company's firewall I did something like that on April Fool's day. Only a few noticed. No, I didn't get sacked for it (anyway it did save bandwidth).

      I suppose most people back then didn't really surf the web.

      --
    16. Re:take a stand by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Hell, Slashdot is giving me the option of disabling advertising just by clicking a checkbox; I'm not doing it.

      I didn't either, untill CSS went haywire one morning and the ad covered the "you have comments" notification as well as the checkbox itself.

    17. Re:take a stand by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      that's when you turn adblock on for /. for a few days while they sort their shit out

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    18. Re:take a stand by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

      "Hell, Slashdot is giving me the option of disabling advertising just by clicking a checkbox; I'm not doing it."

      The fact they do means I give them respect in my book, since many of us come here for the comments and slashdot editors know that comments and discussion are by and large what most people come for. Those that post a lot and add to the discussion are the ones adding value to the site so why shouldn't they have the option of disabling ads? Since most of the value of slashdot comes from the community itself, not the stories.

        lets not forget slashdot attracts those who know how to block ads, so whether they have ad's or not is quite irrelevant since many nerds block ads entirely because they slow down loading pages or becuase many ads have become downright annoyingly rude (i.e. audio on ads that autoplays by itself whenever you load a page). I prefer silent ads then obnoxious TV kind.

    19. Re:take a stand by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      I use a similar approach. Multiple pages don't annoy me as much as Flash ads that fill the screen and use up resources, so I just use FlashBlock. I don't mind just ignoring other ads, especially since most of the sites I visit are ad funded anyway.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    20. Re:take a stand by executivechaos · · Score: 1

      Hell, Slashdot is giving me the option of disabling advertising just by clicking a checkbox; I'm not doing it.

      Same here.

  5. SSD can be a pain because of extra work by damonlab · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have never bothered with firmware updates and additional configuration steps with standard IDE, SATA, SCSI, and SAS drives. While looking around at various SSD, I found that you need to go though all of this additional crap to get things working right. OCZ, for example, has a whole forum dedicated to help tweak out their drives. http://www.ocztechnologyforum.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=186

    1. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because you can't be bothered with tweaking, doesn't mean others don't want to. The fact these drives can be enhanced is a selling point. When better algorithms come along, people can update their existing products if they choose to. I guess you're a conditioned consumer? Throw it in the bin and buy another? Like Apple's bling too I suppose?

    2. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never bothered with firmware updates and additional configuration steps with standard IDE, SATA, SCSI, and SAS drives.

      Pretty much the only reason to issue a firmware update for a hard drive is performance, longevity, or data retention.
      Ignore at your own risk.

    3. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by jimicus · · Score: 1

      Agree entirely. Others (indeed, an AC already has) will go on about improved algorithms, but ATEOTD there's only ever so much improvement that can be made and IMO if there's that much headroom that can be fixed in firmware, it's an immature technology.

    4. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Kayden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      OCZ also has forums dedicated to tweaking ram. There are thousands of forums on the internet dedicated to tweaking every part of a computer. Working "right" isn't "as fast as possible". Most components are configured to run less than optimum so they last longer. Granted, early SSD drives had issues with the abysmal cache causing stuttering, but really, that's just a design fault, not something endemic to the hardware line.

    5. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Kayden · · Score: 1

      I meant maximum instead of optimum. =\ Where's the damn edit button?

    6. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by ledow · · Score: 1

      Surely that's three reasons.

      And I'd worry about a SSD that needs upgrades to ensure data retention (and, additionallly, some SSDs have had firmwares issued that the manufacturer then warns "Don't upgrade the firmware again... we broke the update / storage mechanism and you'll lose data until we sort out a NEW new firmware"). SSD's have one job - store data. That part should NEVER need updating. Performance, possibly, longevity and data retention - holy shit.

      It's like saying that occasionally your fuel tank needs updating to improve it's fire-prevention, stop leakage etc. Maybe it does, but hell, I'd want a DIFFERENT fuel tank if that was the case, not one that "gets updated"... fix it in the design, not the firmware.

      This is the problem - 20 years ago you DIDN'T need a driver for your monitor, or a flashing utility for your hard drive, or any of the other ridiculous things caused by not sticking to standards and/or designing the hardware badly. Today even the bloody photo-keyring I bought for someone had a firmware update issued for it.

    7. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by bfields · · Score: 1

      I've got two SSD's (80GB Intel X25-M), one in a laptop, one in a desktop. Never did any tweaking--just plugged them in and they worked. Haven't done any benchmarking, but boot time, application start-up time, and time for things like "grep -r large-directory/" are all (very) noticeably faster.

    8. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by damnbunni · · Score: 2, Insightful

      On the other hand, when I wanted to update my SCSI card 20 years ago there wasn't a firmware flasher - I had to buy a new chip, pull the old one off the card, and socket the new one in place. (The reason for the update? To add 'Seagate Mode' because Seagate drives didn't all spin up properly and without the new chip, the machine wouldn't boot off some Seagate drives.)

      While things should certainly work right in the first place, being able to update them via software is a godsend.

    9. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty much the only reason to issue a firmware update for a hard drive is performance, longevity, or data retention.

      And a fanatical devotion to the Pope.

    10. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is the problem - 20 years ago you DIDN'T need a driver for your monitor, or a flashing utility for your hard drive, or any of the other ridiculous things caused by not sticking to standards and/or designing the hardware badly.

      I wasn't using computers 20 years ago (I was 6 at the time), but I was a computer tinkerer 15 years ago, and I certainly remember needing drivers for things like monitors (not the video card, the monitor, it was a pain), driver updates for hard drives, etc. Without the drivers you had a standard, very basic functionality because the OS had a built in generic that would just barely work.

      Ever heard of a Plug 'n Play monitor? Of course you have, it's what all monitors are now. But there was a time when there was no such thing. When PnP came out, it was revolutionary, because you didn't need drivers for the stupid simple stuff, like monitors and hard drives. To use PnP required a PnP capable motherboard, hardware device, and OS. A lot of BIOSs still have the setting to disable PnP if the OS isn't capable of it - then you'll need drivers. And of course, even after PnP for many years it was dubbed "Plug 'n Pray" because you were never sure it would actually work right, if not you'd better have drivers on hand.

      Hell, Windows XP still won't run a SCSI drive unless you have the driver for it, and SCSI has been around FOREVER.

      You may not know this, but even today you need drivers for your ATA/SATA hard drive to work properly. Some companies even send you a disk still, just in case. You don't recognize it, because after 20+ years the technology has been pretty well nailed, and new drivers are rarely - if ever- necessary. 99.9% of mass storage drivers are built in to any OS later than XP, but under certain cirumstances it's good to be aware of them and which ones you need (it comes up when using Sysprep sometimes, specifying your drivers can really speed up a re-image). Most of the drivers are contained in one or two INF files, but without them your drive will not work.

      In other words, STFU, it's new technology, and even at its worst it's better than what we have currently. Soon things will be pretty well standardized, and the only substantive difference between brands will be the number of channels, chips, and levels which determine speed, capacity, and price.

      Kinda like hard drives now, where we look at RPMs, cache, and seek times to find the best drives.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    11. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      Just because you can't be bothered with tweaking, doesn't mean others don't want to. The fact these drives can be enhanced is a selling point. When better algorithms come along, people can update their existing products if they choose to. I guess you're a conditioned consumer? Throw it in the bin and buy another? Like Apple's bling too I suppose?

      Maybe he's just not that obsessed with having the very latest and best performance regardless of whether the tradeoff would be money or hassle.

      Ever consider that *your* obsession with having the latest and the best might be a greater reflection of consumer conditioning?

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    12. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      The Intel drives works great without any extra tweaking at all.

    13. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Kjella · · Score: 1

      I hear what you're saying, but there's been some essential features in the firmware upgrades for SSDs. For example my Vertex didn't come with the TRIM command out of the box, it was added in a BIOS.

      Also there's a lot of tuning that isn't done today but will be done in new OS releases, for example Ubuntu has this one:
      SSD blueprint for Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic)

      Basicly there's a lot to gain by changing some of the defaults, and it's being done but if you wanted it right now you'll have to use the forums. In a year it'll be much less necessary.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    14. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Twenty years ago you dodn't need drivers because you had dip switches, but you had kilobytes of memory and megabytes of drive space instead of megabytes of memory and gigabytes of drive space. If it wasn't for drivers you'ld have a refrigerator sized box full of dip switches and it would be hell on earth getting it configured.

      I only have two problems with drivers: First, if you lose the CD you're hosed. Second, sometimes Windows Update will replace a perfectly good driver with one that won't work at all.

    15. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Granted, early SSD drives had issues with the abysmal cache causing stuttering, but really, that's just a design fault, not something endemic to the hardware line." - by Kayden (1406747) on Friday August 21, @12:51PM (#29147991)

      Depends on the KIND of "SSD" you're talking about, really. I use a DIFFERENT KIND (not based on FLASH RAM), & why I have to note this much here - I have 2 diff. kinds of these units...

      1.) A CENATEK "RocketDrive" TRUE SSD (2gb PC-133 SDRAM + PCI 2.2 bus, 133mb/sec. max transfer rate)

      &

      2.) A GIGABYTE "IRAM" TRUE SSD (4gb DDR-400 RAM + SATA 1 bus, 150mb/sec. max transfer rate)

      So you know: I stated "true ssd", because it's not plagued w/ the b.s. that comes w/ FLASH Memory, such as longevity, fragmentation issues, etc. et al (& the types I utilize are NOT dependent on 'write back' caches to achieve solid writes performances either, because it doesn't use FLASH memory)...

      SOME BACKGROUND:

      I've been "into" this tech for years now, since the software ramdisk days of DOS circa 1991 onwards (& even built a model with a gui front end based off the MS DDK example around 1995 or so, which everyone on Windows who made software ones, starts with (DDK template), best ones I saw? Well, from freeware though? Not mine, the APK Ramdisk (32mb size limited, I didn't change from Fat12 is why, the default), but ArSoft's... &, conversely - From the commercial world? EEC Systems/SuperSpeed.com's "SuperDisk" (this mirrors back to a BACKING HDD which is VERY nice & useful), or CENATEK's software one))

      Imo - each of the latter 3 technically have 'unlimited size' (4gb memory address limits in 32-bit really)...

      Anyhow/Anyways - In that realm, I even did well @ MS Tech-Ed 2001 & 2002 where SuperSpeed.com (then EEC Systems) used my ideas for increasing the performance of "industrial strength" DB engines (SQLServer specifically, they placed 2x in a row, as a finalist @ TechEd in its hardest category: SQLServer Performance Enhancement - did that write up for them while I increased their other main product's performance up to 40% better, SuperCache I/II) - people like PCPer & other sites only now, 13++ yrs. later, are extolling the virtue of SSD's for website serving & db server performance gains...

      FINALLY - My MAIN point I have been "leading up to", here, now that that's all "said & aside"?

      Well, after "Moving Away" from Software-based RamDrives (run in SYSTEM RAM, which yes, is FASTER, but, is shared with other tasks occurring in it, everyone seems to 'overlook that' when talking of software ramdrives or even diskcaches)??

      I discovered hardware units...

      Because I liked them, I write up/review in 2001/2002, for CENATEK!

      They used to have on the front page of their website as "An Independent User's Review" of their CENATEK "RocketDrive"... & I liked it, so much, I bought one!

      (Was nice to see, well... Until the server my review was on crashed & the person hosting it lost the data, so did I, oh well)...

      See, the memory on these? NOT SHARED, first of all, & not FLASH secondly!

      Plus - it is dedicated (to whatever YOU want them to do, I use mine for pagefile.sys placement (CENATEK does this now on a single 2gb partition), & webbrowser cache placement, %tmp/temp% ops placement, %comspec% command interpreter (cmd.exe) placement, & logging from all apps & the OS (like eventlogs & FAR more)).

      It offloads my main drive, taking those tasks away from IT (WD Raptor X in RAID 1 mirror), making it, in essence? F A S T E R, because it does not have to deal with those tasks anymore, & the head movements associated w/ them... plus, by removing said files (which grow, change, & get deleted etc. et al)? I reduce fragmentation on my main OS & Programs housing HDD!

      NOW: My MAIN point? Well, I think that SSD's like I use, once they go "64-bit" in their drivers &/or firmware requirements?

    16. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I only have two problems with drivers: First, if you lose the CD you're hosed.

      If you're dealing with an older or a no-name device, quite possible. But a lot of the major manufacturers provide drivers (often newer than the ones on disk) on their websites.

    17. Re:SSD can be a pain because of extra work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason for the "tweaks" espoused by OCZ is that OCZ sold tons of cheap SSDs built with the worst SSD controller on the market (JMicron). Such drives have some rather extreme performance problems. They frequently freeze up and stop accepting new commands for a quarter of a second or more when performing random writes. Since desktop access patterns involve a fair amount of random writes, this was very noticeable, to the point where lots of users complained their JMicron SSDs were slower than hard drives.

      To keep its users (mostly wannabe techies like you who think it's manly to be required to tweak things) busy doing things other than returning these crapball products, OCZ encouraged the development of a tweaking culture. Your SSD isn't defective after all - just have to tweak your OS to work well with it! The tweaks all amounted to disabling useful features such as background search indexing in an effort to minimize the amount of writing going on. "My SSD is awesome fast but I can't search quickly any more because I had to disable it! R@D1C@L!!@!1!!" Of course, even after the tweaks you'd be left with a SSD which still had potential to freeze up at any time.

      OCZ's current lineup includes some drives with much better controllers (Indilinx) which don't suffer the freeze/stuttering problems, but OCZ managed to fuck it up anyways, putting users of those drives through what amounted to public alpha/beta testing of the firmware. (Seriously. Some of their updates had problems severe enough to cause data loss during normal use of the drive. Worse, every time you update the firmware, the drive's contents are erased. With OCZ releasing updates frequently, users who want to keep up with the latest in order to have a semblance of trust in their drive's ability to retain data have been forced to frequently reinstall or restore from backup.)

      I am an engineer. I feel very strongly about things like this. Requiring end users to "tweak" to partially work around fundamental problems means that whoever designed the product failed with a big giant FAILBOAT poster. Sane end users feel much the same way. Feel free to think that we're just sheepy "conditioned consumers" for not wanting to put up with this bullshit. We will point and laugh at you.

  6. Price by symbolset · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the article:

    I was going to include a price comparison, but a few of the units tested (like the Corsair P64) don't seem to be carried anywhere as of yet. That said, prices generally do not sway far from the cost/GB of ~$2.75 set by Intel when they released their G2 drives at record low prices. The exception here is the SLC-based PhotoFast V4S, which will retail for a whopping $499 (that's $15/GB in case you ran out of fingers and toes).

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  7. I doubt it. by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Note that PCPer greedily spans this review over 12 pages. Next time maybe they can keep it down to something more reasonable.

    Um ... why would they do that if their 12-page version gets slashdotted anyway? The whole point of the splitting it up is to get page views.

    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  8. Pussy hurt much? by Chas · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Okay, running my monitor at 1600x1200 right now.

    Each of the pages loads in and requires roughly a half-page scroll.

    That's a decent chunk of data per-page.

    Moreover, the pages load quickly.

    Stuffing it all into 1-6 pages would do nothing more than insure that when they got slashdotted, they'd drown their server faster.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
    1. Re:Pussy hurt much? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Each page was was broken at logical point too. Sure, they could have done the same in 6 pages that didn't have logical breaks, but you know, some people think that everything should be on one long page. Yay for them.

      Is it too hard to click "next" ???? REALLY???

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    2. Re:Pussy hurt much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, running my monitor at 1600x1200 right now.

      Each of the pages loads in and requires roughly a half-page scroll.

      That's a decent chunk of data per-page.

      Moreover, the pages load quickly.

      Stuffing it all into 1-6 pages would do nothing more than insure that when they got slashdotted, they'd drown their server faster.

      Mr. Pussy,

      What do you base these claims on? (bigger pages will take down their service)??

      It all depends on their infrastructure. For all you know, it could help keep them up.

      Think before you speak, think harder if you plan on calling someone a pussy along the way. Perhaps your resolution is set so high you cant read clearly?

      Signed,
      Me.

    3. Re:Pussy hurt much? by SBrach · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's why I boycott books. I mean the scroll format was obviously much better. Turning pages wastes time and saliva, plus there is the mortal danger of paper cuts. Until books and magazines come in a sensible scroll format I won't be buying either.

    4. Re:Pussy hurt much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it too hard to click "next" ???? REALLY???

      Yes.

      If I want to learn something, I want to concentrate on what I'm reading.

      Clicking "next" 12 times means I have to perform 12 unnecessary context switches. Stop reading. Move mouse. Click "next". Wait for page to load/render. Skim over banner ads (or blank spaces :), find next paragraph. Context-switch back into "read" mode.

      We turn pages in books, because books are printed on dead trees, and because scrolls made of dead trees are fragile and don't offer random access.

      The web is not print. There's no need (beyond artifically inflating ad impression counts) to apply the "page" model to the web.

      So yes, it is that hard to stop what I'm doing 12 times, and hit "next".

      Different people have different reading styles. If you're the type of reader who subvocalizes/reads every word, and for whom it takes 1-2 minutes to read the page, maybe the extra 2 seconds per click isn't a big deal. For those of us who read by skimming the text, it takes us 10 seconds to read the page, and the extra 2 seconds per page is 20% of our reading time, plus it interrupts our ability to scan the text. It's incredibly annoying.

    5. Re:Pussy hurt much? by cparker15 · · Score: 1

      Saliva???

      Do you chew on your books?

      --
      Have you driven a fnord... lately?

      You must wait a little bit before using this resource; please try again later.

    6. Re:Pussy hurt much? by SBrach · · Score: 1

      Is your biggest problem with my post really the fact that some people lick their thumb to help them turn pages.

    7. Re:Pussy hurt much? by Cyberax · · Score: 1
    8. Re:Pussy hurt much? by Locke2005 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Back when I was a kid, books used to come in a nice, easily scrollable format. Of course, that was before Gutenburg came along and messed things up with his new-fangled page-at-a-time printing... now get off my lawn!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    9. Re:Pussy hurt much? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Yes it is when each spam filled page takes at least 5 seconds to load (at least in some cases).

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    10. Re:Pussy hurt much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, mainly because those people are idiots.

    11. Re:Pussy hurt much? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      The codex was invented long before the Gutenberg printing press.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  9. signoff tag? by cliffiecee · · Score: 1

    What's with the 'signoff' tag?

    (Off topic, I know... if only slashdot had a 'General Discussion' thread.)

    1. Re:signoff tag? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      replying here, not because I know anything about this, but rather because I want to know the cause for the occurrence as well. (trying to draw attention to the question)
       
      captcha: insipid

    2. Re:signoff tag? by religious+freak · · Score: 1

      Yeah, was wondering that too... actually went to the trouble to do a Google search, and found your question. Mod parent up?????

      Yeah, just curious too.

      --
      If you can read this... 01110101 01110010 00100000 01100001 00100000 01100111 01100101 01100101 01101011
    3. Re:signoff tag? by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing it's just plain old douchebaggery. If you pay attention for long enough you'll see days where some kook tags every story with a nonsensical word like this, or gathers their buddies to mod everyone in a thread -1 Offtopic, or any number of pointless things.

  10. Size always matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enough said.

  11. fewer pages = better server performance by SethJohnson · · Score: 5, Informative

    Stuffing it all into 1-6 pages would do nothing more than insure that when they got slashdotted, they'd drown their server faster.

    Actually, fewer pages with more text content delivered per http request would reduce the load on the server. The bigger impact on the server is repeated visits to the hard drive and trips to the database. When one article requires 12 separate page requests, that cranks up the number of http requests coming in that have to be responded to with hard drive file reads and database queries.

    Not knowing their specific server architecture, the above is a generalization. Caching, virtual memory mapped file systems, etc. can alleviate these bottlenecks.

    Seth

    1. Re:fewer pages = better server performance by closetpsycho · · Score: 1

      I think the best way to do it would be to split it up over two. Have the first page be short, mostly just the introduction, with everything else being on the second. That way, they still get a bit of click-through, their servers don't get hammered as badly by people who only read the first page, we get an article that doesn't span a dozen pages, and everybody gets a free unicorn... I think that sentence got away from me there at the end. You get the point.

  12. You need AutoPager by Ben+Jackson · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I use adblock primarily for these sites.

    Then you're doing it wrong! The plugin you want for 12-page reviews is AutoPager. It works like the /. home page, loading 'next' pages as you get near the bottom. It's even smart enough to strip off headers and footers.

    1. Re:You need AutoPager by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      I use that as well. Advertising trolls deserve as much feeding as forum trolls.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    2. Re:You need AutoPager by Goateee · · Score: 1

      And it can also be made too strip the ads, even if it isn't its main purpose.

  13. The pages are decidedly graphic-heavy by Chas · · Score: 1

    I know what you're talking about. However, for a report formatted the way this one is, likely not a good idea.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  14. But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, two 64GB SSDs in a raid 0 are going to be as fast as a 128GB one, so no need to worry, really.

    1. Re:But... by BronsCon · · Score: 1, Informative

      You also have twice as many points of failure. Three times as many, if you count the RAID controller. Four, if you count the firmware in the RAID controller. Five, if you consider the increased load on your PSU, having to power the additional drive and RAID controller.

      That's ignoring the additional traffic on the bus. That RAID controller doesn't work on FM[1], you know. Then again, it probably doesn't matter; it's not like you'd want faster disk access in a machine being used for video or audio capture, where bus congestion may be an issue.

      Oh... That's precisely where you'd want it. Well, there, and servers; again, bus-congestion could be a bitch.

      [1] F*cking Magic

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    2. Re:But... by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 1

      What "additional traffic on the bus"? Between that outlandish claim and the claim that you have FIVE TIMES AS MANY POINTS OF FAILURE you sound like a FI[1].

      [1] I bet even you can guess this one.

      --
      Brian Fundakowski Feldman
    3. Re:But... by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      Additional hardware on a bus leads to... oh fuck it, here's a car analogy.

      I have one road. On that road, I have one car; this car can do whetever it pleases, whenever it pleases. When I add another car, both cars now have to watch out for each other, or they'll eventually crash.

      This is traffic.

      Also, yes, the more parts, the more points of failure.

      I hope you enjoyed your meal; now, please, go troll elsewhere. I hear 4chan is nice this time of year.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    4. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better not use your DVD drive and hard drive at the same time either...

      Shit - I just used my keyboard and mouse toge

    5. Re:But... by sirsnork · · Score: 1

      In a RAID situation, with a real raid card, there is no additional bus data at all. The data is sent along the same bus to the RAID card. The raid card then splits it into whatever is requireed and writes it to the disks that are connected to that same RAID card. The RAID card creates more data yes (with parity etc) but this is all onboard and the card is designed for this. Data over the PCI-E bus is exactly the same

      --

      Normal people worry me!
    6. Re:But... by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      Data still travels the bus to control the card. Unless you're removing the onboard SATA controller... which is onboard... presumably you're not ignoring its existence...

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    7. Re:But... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      You're saving 100GB. Whether it ends up on one drive or a RAID of a billion drives, it's still 100GB of data going through the bus.

    8. Re:But... by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      I'll concede on that point. On modern systems, it's negligible. More hardware DOES still mean more bus traffic, however; that RAID card does use bus bandwidth to report status, as well. Unless, of course, you're not running any sort of daemon to monitor the status of the disks in your array; a highly unrecommended configuration, at any rate.

      And still nobody can legitimately attack my point about increasing the number of possible points of failure.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
  15. News? by sexconker · · Score: 1, Informative

    How is this news?

    The number of channels increases the theoretical and actual read and write speeds.

    Did anyone NOT know this?

    No one needs to look at capacity to guess the number of channels, and no one needs to dig around for a review site that cracked the bitch open / contacted the Chinese manufacturers to get the number of channels used.

    All you need to look at is the specs, and in case they're lying, benchmarks. No guess work. No hunting for obscure information that might not apply to your particular hardware revision of the same SKU. No bullshit.

  16. Deathstar by stangbat · · Score: 1

    You obviously never had the pleasure of owning an IBM Deskstar 75GXP. Alas, updating firmware, incantations, and anything/everything else did not keep me from suffering a failed drive and RMA hell. Twice.

  17. Filesystem vs drive size by mtemmerm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Slightly off topic, but it's often forgotten that the filesystem also plays an important role in drive performance. Newer filesystems like NILFS (http://www.linux-mag.com/cache/7345/1.html) are created to suit SSD's instead of the legacy rotating media. It claims to hold the same performance, no matter how large the filesystem is.

    Back on topic: We're seeing the same evolution with SSD's now like we saw it with spinning media several years back, when they started to increase the drive size ever more. Eventually these performance differences between larger and smaller drives will disappear: they will simply not be an issue anymore at all when you won't be able to get SSD's smaller than 200GB, like the similar trend with spinning media.

    1. Re:Filesystem vs drive size by hitmark · · Score: 1

      i just hope that at such time, they will come with usb2/3 and/or powered esata at a cost not much different from HDD's of today.

      that way one can use them as both external and internal media...

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  18. Oh yeah, I'm the man! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why Size Matters

    1.8 inches and it's solid state baby!

  19. You mean 12 data channels by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Quoting from TFS:

    Note that PCPer greedily spans this review over 12 pages.

    Methinks kdawson meant to say

    Note that to allow reading on multiple web browser windows at once in parallel, PCPer spans this review over 12 channels, er, pages.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  20. Greedy by Smooth+and+Shiny · · Score: 1

    "Note that PCPer greedily spans this review over 12 pages." Guru3D is also guilty of this. They review at least 500 GTX 295 cards by different makers over the course of a month and the shortest review is always in the neighborhood of 14 pages. Usually they span 16-18 pages, though. I wouldn't mind that if it was mostly new information, but they always throw in the same filler over and over like how to calibrate your monitor. Seriously... if you need to throw that into every review just take up 18 pages for something that is no different from BFG than it is from XFX, then you need to rethink how you compose your reviews.

  21. Super Star Destroyer by egamma · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think that in order to be classified as a Super Star Destroyer, it has to be at least 15km long. Although the salesman will tell you it's worth at least 20 regular Star Destroyers, the price you pay should be no more than the cost of 15 Imperial-class SD's. Also, be on the lookout for used SSDs. They may be infested with Conduit worms, affecting the ability of the SSD to fire its cannons.

    1. Re:Super Star Destroyer by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 2, Funny

      They may be infested with Conduit worms

      ...or mynocks. They chew on the power cables you know.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
    2. Re:Super Star Destroyer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i heard the plans for the new Super Star Destroyer are spread out over 12 droids that communicate with interstitial ads. confirm/deny from the Bothan camp?

  22. Common Cents by ACMENEWSLLC · · Score: 1

    So two 64GB drives in RAID0, or even on just on different SATA channels are faster than one 128GB drive.

    Spread the word! This will change database disk design for decades to come.

    ---

    I've got several OCZ 32GB SSD with the partitions aligned. Wildly faster for running my VM's off of. Windows boots in about 10 seconds onto a LAN. Don't really see a notable difference with my *small* database servers. That's likely because they load huge pages of the database into RAM and serve it from there. I have yet to try this on a large database server.

  23. Free isn't by DamonHD · · Score: 1

    Yes, with you there: I provide all my content free but it does cost me, out of my pocket. I typically only recover 30% of my costs from ad revenue, and that fraction continues to fall.

    Remember that 'sticking it to the man' on some kind of principle is no kind of principle at all. In some cases that 'man' is a fellow geek being kind to you; would you piss in his/my beer too on some kind of principle (CmdrTaco excepted, my liege)?

    And *no*, I absolutely seriously do not want advertisers' money stolen by clicking on ads that visitors are not interested in as some kind of misguided 'tip jar': I'm an advertiser to bring new traffic in too.

    Just allow a few more shades of grey in!

    (I run NoScript, BTW, but primarily for safety; it's a jungle out there!)

    Rgds

    Damon

    --
    http://m.earth.org.uk/
    1. Re:Free isn't by WNight · · Score: 1

      I run no-script because I hate bad UI and almost everything that people use javascript for is making their own custom UIs. In almost all cases it's annoying or interferes with my browsing habits (selecting links by text or number, etc).

      I allow it places like here where I agree with the value-add, but it's my computer, my screen, my eyes, and my choice of how it's viewed. Not just because I can, but because depending if I'm on the projector or the netbook my viewing needs are totally different.

      HTML was all about a platform and layout independent markup. Many web designers forgot that so no-script, aardvark, ad-block, etc were created, but it's supposed to let us view what we want, how we want.

      If you (generic) wish to get paid for for eyeballs perhaps the web isn't for you...

    2. Re:Free isn't by DamonHD · · Score: 1

      Umm, I make sure that my sites work without JavaScript (indeed in just the way you want them to work). I too am technically and ethically and otherwise distressed by designers who break HTML's original contract just because they can and/or they are too lazy or ignorant to do better.

      I don't take my ball and go home if you won't contribute because I provide many pro-bono services from my own pocket and accept that there are some freeloaders and some who genuinely cannot pay (for whom I primarily provide the services) and I cannot distinguish between them with any simple reliable technical measure.

      But there are lots of people who make up wonderfully complex rationalisations for simply being mean tightwads. Be sure that your principles are really principles and not merely failed justifications for freeloading. As humans we are amazing confabulators: it takes effort to overcome.

      Rgds

      Damon

      --
      http://m.earth.org.uk/
  24. so it's true by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    Size DOES matter.

  25. T400S / Linux people by nostriluu · · Score: 1


    I just ordered a Thinkpad T400S with the 128GB SSD option. It was impossible to determine whose SSD it is - some reports said Samsung, some said Toshiba, reps don't know. Small random writes (eg generating class files, but very commonly used in apps ranging from Pidgin to Firefox) can be quite slow with SSDs. I intend to use the device with Ubuntu installed for typical desktop use, and developing server ware that uses Java, PHP, and MySQL.

    Anyone have insight with this device combination and know of any issues?

    1. Re:T400S / Linux people by chizu · · Score: 1

      I have an SSD from a T400S installed in a Fujitsu P1630. It's the Toshiba variety that's been shipping recently (looks like they started producing them in June).

      Small random writes are fast, similar to the Intel X25-M. Sequential read is slower, but sequential write is usually faster than Intel's drives. Overall a very good SSD.

    2. Re:T400S / Linux people by nostriluu · · Score: 1

      Thanks for that info. Fujitsu makes great computers, aside from their keyboards (I had my eye on a Fujitsu Tablet). Hopefully the drive will relate to what you posted.

  26. REPLY HERE, if you like, Vigile (see URL)... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject-line, & THIS url:

    http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1343547&cid=29152125

    Thanks for your time... I replied to a fellow named Kayden there, because he seems to be "siding" w/ you, & he was the 1st person I saw posting in your defense...

    APK

    P.S.=> Just offering a view point, that's a BIT DIFFERENT than the folks "trolling" you here - but, they DO make valid points (& thus, they really AREN'T "TYPICAL TROLLS" of /.)...

    Believe you me: I am way, Way, WAY used to the worst ones here, lol, as I get attacked & downmodded by them quite a lot (for b.s. crap like "writing style", lol, & considering there is no "English Grammar" section here? It only means they are OFF-TOPIC, & really just don't have the ability/knowledge to attack my technical points well is all, to discredit my points... (&, everyone knows this - &, many of them are just "sock-puppet" registered account users, & rarely post under their registered accounts to attack me with their trolling... lol, that, I have to LAUGH @, hugely, because they *THINK* they're "clever" using alternate accounts here, & are so transparent, it's not even funny anymore)...

    Anyhow - in regards to your "naysayers" here? Well - I have to "go with them" on some points... most in fact!

    I just extend their views a bit more, security-wise really, above & beyond the "ads slow me down" & "I pay for my linetime" views in that URL above - you MAY find it, an interesting read, for security AND, for HOW I USE SSD's & a diff. kind than most folks today have!

    (Your 'naysayers' views? I have stated those here, & elsewhere on countless forums, & many times - Guys who are webmasters, botmasters (good, I am glad I tick THESE types off), & DNS Admins even? They're not exactly "crazy about my methods")

    My methods involve using a HOSTS file to block stuff & yes, to speed up surfing too, and your system as well (more in that url, in detail, & again - thanks for your time) - because I think you see & understand the end-user's viewpoint, due to some of your replies? I think you may realize it is, truly, a "catch-22" situation basically... apk

  27. it's not the size that matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's how you use it!

  28. Oh yeah by mqduck · · Score: 1

    My "drive" is in a solid state, and it's size is massive.

    --
    Property is theft.
  29. no by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

    Not if you put it out publicly. Want rules, go private such as a subscription model.
    My computer, My time, my choice.
        You can say anything you want (obvious 'fire' in a crowded theater, liable, slander etc. exceptions).
    and people have a right to ignore any portion thereof.
          Free speech != guaranteed audience or acceptance.
    Haven't read the article yet, but if you want it read and the adds viewed, give folks a reason past a third grade 'not fair' argument.

    Mcyroft

    --
    https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
  30. Gross!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This auto-trim sounds gross!!!! I do NOT want my drive to be looking at file system structures -- this'll cause horrible bugs if it decides a non-NTFS file system is ntfs and starts randomly zeroing parts of your file system! My kernel already has TRIM support, just implement it and let trimming happen where it belongs, in the kernel.