See any recent ads for laptops or PC’s that you’ve probably heard the initials SSD quite a lot.
SSD stands for solid states drive a reinvention of the old fashion hard drive but with no moving
parts. Hi! I’m Kara Tsuboi let’s talk about SSD’s, what are they and why should you care?
Followed state drives are getting a lot of high price right now and for good reason, why do you
buy a new PC or a laptop that comes with one or you decide to upgrade you existing hard drive
zippy performance makes SSD’s an appealing option and prices are dropping rapidly. Bottom
line it’s a good time to consider sliding one onto your computer. Okay you say but your current
hard drive is working find, why should you switch? Well there are several reasons, reason one
compared with standard hard drives SSD’s can access that of quicker which can make a system
faster and apps more responsive. Upgrading to an SSD will mean less time waiting for the
computer to boot up and for you files to become available. Really bad news on speed, saving
files onto SSD is a bit okay. Reason two, SSD’s require far less power than hard drive storage
systems and so in SSD in your laptop battery may less long enough for you to finish right into
that power point before the plain lens. Reason three, no moving parts. When you think about
how much trouble we take to ensure this safety and integrity of our spinning hard drives the idea
of this solid states storage bank that would scrape or sabotage our information is pretty cool.
SSD’s lacks of moving parts are giving them a huge edge on multiple levels. First SSD’s are
more shock resistant than magnetic hard desk drives. Second, SSD’s are silent which you and
anyone near you will appreciate when your multitasking on your laptop in front of the TV or just
trying to concentrate and they generate less heat and use less energy so they don’t need
potentially noisy funs. Naturally they’re all cons as well as pro’s will SSD are concern. One big
con is the price, sold state drives are much more expensive per gigabyte than standard hard
drives while you can probably find a 1 terabyte hard drive for close to 100 bucks at 256 gigs
SSD get set you back over $700. Prices will come down but right now sacrifice of storage base
to get the best blend of price, performance and capacity. One thing to be aware with an SSD
performance can degrade over time base on how much you use the drive. Look for manufacturers
that taught tools to help even out how the drives rights data across the flash memory cells and if
you are using Windows 7 look for drives that supports window stream with should help with
managing drive performance.
Before you buy you want to figure out what kind of hard drive connector your computer uses. If
your computer boosts serial ETA you’ll good to go. Next you have to determine the physical
drive size your computer will accommodate, typically desktop computers have 3 ½ inch drive
bay and laptops had 2 ½ inch bay. Netbooks may have an even smaller 1.8 inch bay, still most
SSD’s adhere to the current 2 ½ inch hard desk standard and use the same connectors as hard
desks drives. This SSD’s can easily fit into a current laptop or a desktop, want more details
check out the video on pcworld.com, how to install an SSD in your laptop. Here is a final tip, not
all SSD’s are created equal, cheaper models are significantly slower than top of the line devices
which feature better performance, capacity is relatively limited too. 256 gigs is the current high
in for affordable SSD’s and be careful about free space, once you field your SSD performance
chokes. Finally if you’re running Windows XP or anything order; check to make sure the new
drive is compatible with your OS. And again if you’re running Window 7 be sure to buy drive
with Windows trend support. Still solid state drives are all the rage, they have no moving and are
more ragged and shock resistant and standard hard drives which make them perfect for laptops.
Add improve laptop battery life and fabulous that reading performance and they’re hard to resist.
I’m Kara Tsuboi with the solid scoop on solid states drive, thanks for watching.
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