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Groups > comp.sys.mac.misc > #611 > unrolled thread
| Started by | Tim Lance <nope@nada.com> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2011-08-23 21:46 -0500 |
| Last post | 2011-08-24 22:11 +0000 |
| Articles | 10 — 7 participants |
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Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? Tim Lance <nope@nada.com> - 2011-08-23 21:46 -0500
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? AD <isquat@gmail.com> - 2011-08-24 02:15 -0700
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> - 2011-08-24 07:56 -0500
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? Tim Lance <nope@nada.com> - 2011-08-24 14:47 -0500
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? Steve R <steve.r@in.au> - 2011-08-25 07:53 +1000
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? dempson@actrix.gen.nz (David Empson) - 2011-08-25 12:01 +1200
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> - 2011-08-24 19:00 -0500
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? yourname@yourisp.com (Your Name) - 2011-08-25 09:52 +1200
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> - 2011-08-24 18:58 -0500
Re: Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? David Lesher <wb8foz@panix.com> - 2011-08-24 22:11 +0000
| From | Tim Lance <nope@nada.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-23 21:46 -0500 |
| Subject | Gonna buy new laptop > SSD wonderings? |
| Message-ID | <9bj6viF5f8U1@mid.individual.net> |
At some point I assume I'll end up with a regular ole hard drive and an SSD for booting/apps. I can buy the lappie (13" 2.7 i7 MacBook Pro) with the SSD and get a kit for some SATA drive to put into the optical bay. Or I can just buy the MBP and add the SSD kit to the optical bay. So here's my dumb question: Is booting an SSD from the regular drive bay any different from using it in a kit in the optical bay? -- Tim
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| From | AD <isquat@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-24 02:15 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #611 |
On Aug 24, 5:46 am, Tim Lance <n...@nada.com> wrote: > At some point I assume I'll end up with a regular ole hard drive and an SSD > for booting/apps. I can buy the lappie (13" 2.7 i7 MacBook Pro) with the SSD > and get a kit for some SATA drive to put into the optical bay. Or I can just > buy the MBP and add the SSD kit to the optical bay. So here's my dumb > question: Is booting an SSD from the regular drive bay any different from > using it in a kit in the optical bay? > osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes why bother with an internal ssd in a device that you can't easily service yourself?
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| From | Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-24 07:56 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <jollyroger-630244.07564224082011@news.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #612 |
In article <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, AD <isquat@gmail.com> wrote: > On Aug 24, 5:46 am, Tim Lance <n...@nada.com> wrote: > > At some point I assume I'll end up with a regular ole hard drive and an SSD > > for booting/apps. I can buy the lappie (13" 2.7 i7 MacBook Pro) with the SSD > > and get a kit for some SATA drive to put into the optical bay. Or I can just > > buy the MBP and add the SSD kit to the optical bay. So here's my dumb > > question: Is booting an SSD from the regular drive bay any different from > > using it in a kit in the optical bay? > > > > osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes That's irrelevant. Startup time isn't the only speed gain. I can tell you from experience that having an SSD as the internal drive in a MacBook Pro makes it very noticeably faster after boot as well - so much so that I likely won't ever have one with a traditional hard drive ever again. The thing just plain screams with an SSD in it. > why bother with an internal ssd in a device that you can't easily > service yourself? Oh please. I've taken apart and serviced numerous Mac laptops. It's not hard. And there are step-by-step procedures with pictures and all online for anyone interested in doing it. It's not rocket science. -- Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me. E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts. JR
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| From | Tim Lance <nope@nada.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-24 14:47 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <9bl2qsFl2vU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #613 |
On Wed, 24 Aug 2011 07:56:42 -0500, Jolly Roger wrote (in article <jollyroger-630244.07564224082011@news.individual.net>): > In article > <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, > AD <isquat@gmail.com> wrote: > >> On Aug 24, 5:46 am, Tim Lance <n...@nada.com> wrote: >>> At some point I assume I'll end up with a regular ole hard drive and an SSD >>> for booting/apps. I can buy the lappie (13" 2.7 i7 MacBook Pro) with the >>> SSD >>> and get a kit for some SATA drive to put into the optical bay. Or I can >>> just >>> buy the MBP and add the SSD kit to the optical bay. So here's my dumb >>> question: Is booting an SSD from the regular drive bay any different from >>> using it in a kit in the optical bay? >>> >> >> osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes > > That's irrelevant. Startup time isn't the only speed gain. I can tell > you from experience that having an SSD as the internal drive in a > MacBook Pro makes it very noticeably faster after boot as well - so much > so that I likely won't ever have one with a traditional hard drive ever > again. The thing just plain screams with an SSD in it. > >> why bother with an internal ssd in a device that you can't easily >> service yourself? > > Oh please. I've taken apart and serviced numerous Mac laptops. It's not > hard. And there are step-by-step procedures with pictures and all online > for anyone interested in doing it. It's not rocket science. > > Much thanks, JR. Yeah, the other reply was essentially useless as it disregarded my question.. And upon further research I can choose whether to have the SSD in the regular place or the optical so it makes no real difference. And as for the work, it's child's play to my daughters 14" G4 iBook - that was a bear I never want to cross ever again. I seldom frequent these parts anymore but did re-up my individualnet account. Glad to see you and others still around. -- Tim
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| From | Steve R <steve.r@in.au> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-25 07:53 +1000 |
| Message-ID | <VZ6dnZ7MyrtO78jTnZ2dnUVZ_vadnZ2d@giganews.com> |
| In reply to | #615 |
On 25/08/11 5:47 AM, Tim Lance wrote: > On Wed, 24 Aug 2011 07:56:42 -0500, Jolly Roger wrote > (in article<jollyroger-630244.07564224082011@news.individual.net>): > >> In article >> <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, >> AD<isquat@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> On Aug 24, 5:46 am, Tim Lance<n...@nada.com> wrote: >>>> At some point I assume I'll end up with a regular ole hard drive and an SSD >>>> for booting/apps. I can buy the lappie (13" 2.7 i7 MacBook Pro) with the >>>> SSD >>>> and get a kit for some SATA drive to put into the optical bay. Or I can >>>> just >>>> buy the MBP and add the SSD kit to the optical bay. So here's my dumb >>>> question: Is booting an SSD from the regular drive bay any different from >>>> using it in a kit in the optical bay? >>>> >>> >>> osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes >> >> That's irrelevant. Startup time isn't the only speed gain. I can tell >> you from experience that having an SSD as the internal drive in a >> MacBook Pro makes it very noticeably faster after boot as well - so much >> so that I likely won't ever have one with a traditional hard drive ever >> again. The thing just plain screams with an SSD in it. >> >>> why bother with an internal ssd in a device that you can't easily >>> service yourself? >> >> Oh please. I've taken apart and serviced numerous Mac laptops. It's not >> hard. And there are step-by-step procedures with pictures and all online >> for anyone interested in doing it. It's not rocket science. >> >> > > Much thanks, JR. Yeah, the other reply was essentially useless as it > disregarded my question.. > > And upon further research I can choose whether to have the SSD in the regular > place or the optical so it makes no real difference. And as for the work, > it's child's play to my daughters 14" G4 iBook - that was a bear I never want > to cross ever again. > > I seldom frequent these parts anymore but did re-up my individualnet account. > Glad to see you and others still around. > I was looking the other day for a replacement drive for my MacBook, and came across hybrid drives. They have a conventional drive together with a small SSD. They apparently take a little while to work out what to cache in the SSD. It does work only as a read cache, not as read/write partition, but I imagine it would speed boot? Given I wanted a bigger drive so that I could keep a Snow Leopard partition as well as Lion, I didn't think it would work for me, but I'd be interested to hear from anyone who's tried one. Steve
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| From | dempson@actrix.gen.nz (David Empson) |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-25 12:01 +1200 |
| Message-ID | <1k6jzdy.aksc8cq0zgngN%dempson@actrix.gen.nz> |
| In reply to | #617 |
Steve R <steve.r@in.au> wrote: > On 25/08/11 5:47 AM, Tim Lance wrote: > > On Wed, 24 Aug 2011 07:56:42 -0500, Jolly Roger wrote > > (in article<jollyroger-630244.07564224082011@news.individual.net>): > > > >> In article > >> <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, > >> AD<isquat@gmail.com> wrote: > >> > >>> On Aug 24, 5:46 am, Tim Lance<n...@nada.com> wrote: > >>>> At some point I assume I'll end up with a regular ole hard drive and > >>>> an SSD for booting/apps. I can buy the lappie (13" 2.7 i7 MacBook > >>>> Pro) with the SSD and get a kit for some SATA drive to put into the > >>>> optical bay. Or I can just buy the MBP and add the SSD kit to the > >>>> optical bay. So here's my dumb question: Is booting an SSD from the > >>>> regular drive bay any different from using it in a kit in the optical > >>>> bay? > >>>> > >>> > >>> osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes > >> > >> That's irrelevant. Startup time isn't the only speed gain. I can tell > >> you from experience that having an SSD as the internal drive in a > >> MacBook Pro makes it very noticeably faster after boot as well - so much > >> so that I likely won't ever have one with a traditional hard drive ever > >> again. The thing just plain screams with an SSD in it. > >> > >>> why bother with an internal ssd in a device that you can't easily > >>> service yourself? > >> > >> Oh please. I've taken apart and serviced numerous Mac laptops. It's not > >> hard. And there are step-by-step procedures with pictures and all online > >> for anyone interested in doing it. It's not rocket science. > >> > >> > > > > Much thanks, JR. Yeah, the other reply was essentially useless as it > > disregarded my question.. > > > > And upon further research I can choose whether to have the SSD in the > > regular place or the optical so it makes no real difference. And as for > > the work, it's child's play to my daughters 14" G4 iBook - that was a > > bear I never want to cross ever again. > > > > I seldom frequent these parts anymore but did re-up my individualnet > > account. Glad to see you and others still around. > > > > I was looking the other day for a replacement drive for my MacBook, and > came across hybrid drives. They have a conventional drive together with > a small SSD. They apparently take a little while to work out what to > cache in the SSD. It does work only as a read cache, not as read/write > partition, but I imagine it would speed boot? I've had a Seagate Momentus XT 500 GB hybrid drive in my MacBook Pro for about ten months. I couldn't care less about boot times. I only reboot when forced to by software updates. On occasions where I have restarted a few times in quick succession, it is substantially faster at getting from the login prompt to Finder, Dock, SystemUIServer and DragThing up and running: about three seconds instead of fifteen. In day to day operation, it is hard to pinpoint whether the performance gains are due to having a 7200 rpm drive instead of 5400 rpm, or higher drive capacity resulting in faster throughput due to higher data density, or the drive's solid state cache, or a larger RAM cache on the drive, or enough free RAM in the computer to act as a big cache (some of these caches may be overlapping each other, reducing the benefit). I like it, and it will keep me going until circa 500 GB SSDs drop in price enough to be affordable, or I get a new laptop with hard drive plus SSD, or I decide to get rid of the optical drive (I could make do with an external one on my desk at work in addition to my existing one at home), or I can rearrange things so I don't need as much storage in my MacBook Pro. > Given I wanted a bigger drive so that I could keep a Snow Leopard > partition as well as Lion, I didn't think it would work for me, but I'd > be interested to hear from anyone who's tried one. I will be doing that soon unless I get Snow Leopard working in a VM instead. I'd prefer a VM to avoid Lion and Snow Leopard implementations of Spotlight fighting with each other on switching systems, and to let me run old apps at the same time as my regular system. Need to free up some disk space first. -- David Empson dempson@actrix.gen.nz
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| From | Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-24 19:00 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <jollyroger-397EF8.19003024082011@news.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #615 |
In article <9bl2qsFl2vU1@mid.individual.net>, Tim Lance <nope@nada.com> wrote: > On Wed, 24 Aug 2011 07:56:42 -0500, Jolly Roger wrote > (in article <jollyroger-630244.07564224082011@news.individual.net>): > > > In article > > <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, > > AD <isquat@gmail.com> wrote: > > > >> On Aug 24, 5:46 am, Tim Lance <n...@nada.com> wrote: > >>> At some point I assume I'll end up with a regular ole hard drive and an > >>> SSD > >>> for booting/apps. I can buy the lappie (13" 2.7 i7 MacBook Pro) with the > >>> SSD > >>> and get a kit for some SATA drive to put into the optical bay. Or I can > >>> just > >>> buy the MBP and add the SSD kit to the optical bay. So here's my dumb > >>> question: Is booting an SSD from the regular drive bay any different from > >>> using it in a kit in the optical bay? > >>> > >> > >> osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes > > > > That's irrelevant. Startup time isn't the only speed gain. I can tell > > you from experience that having an SSD as the internal drive in a > > MacBook Pro makes it very noticeably faster after boot as well - so much > > so that I likely won't ever have one with a traditional hard drive ever > > again. The thing just plain screams with an SSD in it. > > > >> why bother with an internal ssd in a device that you can't easily > >> service yourself? > > > > Oh please. I've taken apart and serviced numerous Mac laptops. It's not > > hard. And there are step-by-step procedures with pictures and all online > > for anyone interested in doing it. It's not rocket science. > > Much thanks, JR. Yeah, the other reply was essentially useless as it > disregarded my question.. > > And upon further research I can choose whether to have the SSD in the regular > place or the optical so it makes no real difference. And as for the work, > it's child's play to my daughters 14" G4 iBook - that was a bear I never want > to cross ever again. I'm not sure I'd bother keeping an HD in mine if it were me. The only reason I might use the CD bay is if I wanted a second internal SSD - perhaps to stripe them or something for an even greater peed boost. : ) > I seldom frequent these parts anymore but did re-up my individualnet account. > Glad to see you and others still around. Same here! Glad you're back. Hope you'll stay a while. : ) -- Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me. E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts. JR
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| From | yourname@yourisp.com (Your Name) |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-25 09:52 +1200 |
| Message-ID | <yourname-2508110952270001@203-118-184-80.dsl.dyn.ihug.co.nz> |
| In reply to | #613 |
In article <jollyroger-630244.07564224082011@news.individual.net>, Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> wrote: > In article > <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, > > > > osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes > > That's irrelevant. Startup time isn't the only speed gain. I can tell > you from experience that having an SSD as the internal drive in a > MacBook Pro makes it very noticeably faster after boot as well - so much > so that I likely won't ever have one with a traditional hard drive ever > again. The thing just plain screams with an SSD in it. To some extent it of course depends what you're using the computer for and how you use it. Someone (with a laptop with a ton of RAM) who leaves Mail and Word open all day won't notice as much benefit as someone using applications like Photoshop or quitting applications when not in use.
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| From | Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-24 18:58 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <jollyroger-8E897B.18583924082011@news.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #616 |
In article <yourname-2508110952270001@203-118-184-80.dsl.dyn.ihug.co.nz>, yourname@yourisp.com (Your Name) wrote: > In article <jollyroger-630244.07564224082011@news.individual.net>, Jolly > Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> wrote: > > > In article > > <cf7977fc-d9d4-4b1d-9ee4-63c3fc30de95@g9g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>, > > > > > > osx is not msdos. You don't need to reboot every 10 minutes > > > > That's irrelevant. Startup time isn't the only speed gain. I can tell > > you from experience that having an SSD as the internal drive in a > > MacBook Pro makes it very noticeably faster after boot as well - so much > > so that I likely won't ever have one with a traditional hard drive ever > > again. The thing just plain screams with an SSD in it. > > To some extent it of course depends what you're using the computer for and > how you use it. Someone (with a laptop with a ton of RAM) who leaves Mail > and Word open all day won't notice as much benefit as someone using > applications like Photoshop or quitting applications when not in use. Of course. YMMV. -- Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me. E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts. JR
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| From | David Lesher <wb8foz@panix.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-24 22:11 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <j33stn$agt$1@reader1.panix.com> |
| In reply to | #613 |
Jolly Roger <jollyroger@pobox.com> writes: >> why bother with an internal ssd in a device that you can't easily >> service yourself? >Oh please. I've taken apart and serviced numerous Mac laptops. It's not >hard. And there are step-by-step procedures with pictures and all online >for anyone interested in doing it. It's not rocket science. I'll call next time either of my iBook's needs a drive or fan swap.... -- A host is a host from coast to coast.................wb8foz@nrk.com & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433
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