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An SSD for Your Current Computer May Save the Cost of a New One (Video)

Obviously, the first performance enhancement you do on any computer you own is max out the RAM. RAM has gotten cheap, and adding more of it to almost any computer will make it faster without requiring any other modification (or any great skill). The next thing you need to do, says Larry O'Connor, the founder and CEO of Other World Computing (OWC), is move from a "platter" hard drive to a Solid State Drive (SSD). Larry's horse in this race is that his company sells SSDs, mostly for Macs. But he's a real evangelist about SSDs and computer mods in general, even if you buy them from NewEgg, Amazon or another vendor.

A big (vendor-neutral) thing Larry points out is that just because you have a Terabyte drive in your computer now doesn't mean you need a Terabyte SSD, which can easily cost $500. Rather, he says, all you need is a large enough SSD to contain your OS and software and whatever data you're working with at the moment, so you might be able to get by with a 120 GB SSD that costs well under $100. Clone your current main drive, stick in the new SSD, and if your need more storage, get another hard drive (or use your old one). Simple. Efficient. And a lot cheaper than buying a new computer, whether we're talking about home, business or even enterprise use. (Alternate video link.)

9 of 353 comments (clear)

  1. DUH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    YEAH WE KNOW

    1. Re:DUH by jones_supa · · Score: 4, Funny

      Also, while dragging files on your desktop, you can hold Ctrl to change whether the files are moved or copied.

  2. Preaching to the choir? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Soo this is Slashdot, not "Mom Computer Consumer Weekly".

    1. Re:Preaching to the choir? by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


      If you can afford it, your computer's RAM should be maxed out to 640KB.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
  3. it's true by alphatel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Almost every failing of a computer can be related to where the OS sits. I have replaced/installed over 50 new/used computer platters with SSDs as the primary and a platter as the storage. Not only does boot time vanish, but just about everything under the sun is improved. I could ramble on but I think that's what the video does. Basically it's just smarter regardless of whether you use Win/Mac/Linux etc.

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
  4. Re:Obviously? by Yosho · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Use it as a ramdisk for what, though?

    If you want general OS and application usage, you'll have to copy over all the data from your main disk first, which is going to take some time, and if anything changes, you'd need to sync it back to your main disk, which will take more time, and you're at risk of losing data if you have an unexpected shutdown. An SSD is way better for that kind of task.

    It's completely unsuitable for any kind of long-term storage, of course.

    You could use it for temporary files for applications like Photoshop... which is a good use of it, but very situational.

    Using it as a swap disk would just be silly when you could just deactivate the ramdisk and have all that RAM again.

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    Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
  5. Re:uhhh... by Russ1642 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm posting through a time portal from 2035. Windows 22 requires 128 terabytes but you're an idiot if you try with less than 512. All I use the computer for is posting cat holograms and running porn programs on my holodeck. It's ridiculous.

  6. what the hell? by slashmydots · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Obviously, the first performance enhancement you do on any computer you own is max out the RAM"
    What kind of clueless moron wrote that nonsense?

    1. Re:what the hell? by ZeroPly · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, total noob move. My first step is to replace all the fans with ones that have lights, then add some strip lighting to the inside. I also like to replace the case screws with the good titanium ones that are $3 a pop. Those reduce weight significantly.

      --
      Support microSD: in a post 9/11 world, it is unwise to carry your data on media that you cannot comfortably swallow.