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my kinda ape posted:What if your motherboard came with one I've heard that if you can stomach the idea of potentially compromising a small part of your motherboard's warranty, altering the thermal pad to *only* contact the controller chip can improve efficiency.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 00:59 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 14:52 |
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my kinda ape posted:What if your motherboard came with one Use it, or don't, it probably makes no difference to the average pc enthusiast. (And many mobos have heatspreader plates that are also how the drives physically secure down, in which case of course you should use them.) BIG HEADLINE posted:I've heard that if you can stomach the idea of potentially compromising a small part of your motherboard's warranty, altering the thermal pad to *only* contact the controller chip can improve efficiency. This sounds like an idiot idea that could hurt the mobo warranty *or* destroy the drive by shorting components against bare metal where the thermal pad used to be. The question is where will you notice the extra 100mb/s sustained transfer speed outside of some benchmark?
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:04 |
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Then I guess all the laptops where you see a thermal pad over the SSD controller chip (so it contacts the RF shield and uses it as a sink) and not the NAND were designed by idiots.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:07 |
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BIG HEADLINE posted:Then I guess all the laptops where you see a thermal pad over the SSD controller chip (so it contacts the RF shield and uses it as a sink) and not the NAND were designed by idiots. An enclosed laptop with zero ventilation and a big open case with 3+ fans are quite different environments. Plus they probably measured carefully to know that things aren't moving around and they won't have problems. For some of these mobos where the plate itself is the retention mechanism, the springy contacts in the m.2 slot are pushing the stick out and the plate is pushing in. See where this could cause problems?
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:14 |
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I hate m.2s so much with their tiny loving screws that disappear forever if you drop one. Mobos that have the plastic push retention pins are cool though.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:21 |
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priznat posted:I hate m.2s so much with their tiny loving screws that disappear forever if you drop one. It pisses me off that they didn't use an existing, well known and used PC screw type for the job.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:46 |
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If anything, they're in a race to see who can re-invent the wheel the most and in the most infuriating way. USB Implementers Forum is currently in the lead with its psychotic renaming of old standards to be as confusing as humanly possible.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:53 |
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HalloKitty posted:It pisses me off that they didn't use an existing, well known and used PC screw type for the job. Or rather they should have used the well known SO-DIMM clips.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:55 |
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Saukkis posted:Or rather they should have used the well known SO-DIMM clips. See, that kind of intelligent thinking is why you weren't on the design team
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 01:57 |
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Will cloning a hard drive to a SSD decrease the SSD's lifespan?
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 03:18 |
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Its Chocolate posted:Will cloning a hard drive to a SSD decrease the SSD's lifespan? If you do it about 5,000 times in a row, yes
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 03:19 |
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Its Chocolate posted:Will cloning a hard drive to a SSD decrease the SSD's lifespan? Compared to leaving it in the box? Yes. Otherwise, no. Why would you think this?
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 03:23 |
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FRINGE posted:Compared to leaving it in the box? Yes. I don't understand SSDs
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 03:56 |
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Cloning an HDD to an SSD will induce roughly the same wear as installing an OS and restoring your data and apps to an SSD.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 04:04 |
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SSDs do wear out as you write data to them, but copying a few hundreds gigs as a one-time thing will barely make a scratch in the lifespan of a modern drive. They are usually rated to endure hundreds of terabytes in writes before dying.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 04:04 |
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Its Chocolate posted:Will cloning a hard drive to a SSD decrease the SSD's lifespan? In a lot of conditions, yes, by around half. However Win7 onward SHOULD already account for this. To be on the safe side, instead of cloning just format it as empty and copy over the data.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 10:47 |
endlessmonotony posted:In a lot of conditions, yes, by around half. What kind of SSD are you using that has such a terrible endurance rating that it can only be fully written to twice??
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 11:56 |
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my kinda ape posted:What kind of SSD are you using that has such a terrible endurance rating that it can only be fully written to twice?? Its solid state.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 12:07 |
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You need to align the sectors to the pages and cloning software not aware of the hardware limitations doesn't necessarily do that.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 12:28 |
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endlessmonotony posted:You need to align the sectors to the pages and cloning software not aware of the hardware limitations doesn't necessarily do that. Stop using Norton Ghost from 1999, then.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 13:54 |
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Geemer posted:Stop using Norton Ghost from 1999, then. It was an actual real problem in 2010, man. That was basically yesterday. And still is using lovely Linux scripts as opposed to real cloning software.
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# ? Dec 29, 2019 14:08 |
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I'm going to get a X570 motherboard soonish, and I'm wondering about which system drive to get. Since I do video and photography work, and play games, I wanted to get a 4tb main drive. The most affordable is the Samsung 860 Evo 4TB, which is a SATA drive. (There is a Sabrent PCIe 4.0 4TB drive, but it's not supported or sold in Europe and costs about 300€ more) For the same-ish price I can get an ADATA Gammix S50 PCIe 4.0 NVMe drive, which the mobo will support. Is the speed increase worth the price? I wanted to wait for the announcements at CES, I'm going to assume that more manufacturers might switch to PCIe 4.0 there and maybe also offer larger capacity drives.
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 10:06 |
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Many x570 have two NVME slots so you could get two 2TB NVME instead as an option. Also worth noting that NVME over SATA mostly affects write speeds, read speeds are fine (especially for games).
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 10:59 |
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My pc is too old and doesn't have a slot for M.2, so I figured I buy one of those pcie->m.2 adapter cards. But one of the comments on the store page said something about top speed being affected by the mainboard? What do I have to look for to make sure that even is a sensible option?
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 15:27 |
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mike12345 posted:My pc is too old and doesn't have a slot for M.2, so I figured I buy one of those pcie->m.2 adapter cards. But one of the comments on the store page said something about top speed being affected by the mainboard? What do I have to look for to make sure that even is a sensible option? The card needs to explicitly use pcie lanes and not be a sata card that happens to be powered by the pcie slot.
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 15:29 |
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Also if the mainboard is very old it might top out at pcie gen 2 which has half the throughput of gen 3. Still will beat sata’s rear end sideways though.
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 15:34 |
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I thought of buying the Intel SSD 660p 2TB at 1800MB/s. From a quick glance it seems like the cheapest/fastest option if I want a non-HDD 2TB drive (~ 200 Euro where I live). The Samsung SSD 860 QVO 2TB costs more or less the same but at half the read/write speed.
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 15:43 |
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mike12345 posted:My pc is too old and doesn't have a slot for M.2, so I figured I buy one of those pcie->m.2 adapter cards. But one of the comments on the store page said something about top speed being affected by the mainboard? What do I have to look for to make sure that even is a sensible option? What's more important than top speed is compatibility. Older mobos / chipsets generally can't boot from a NVMe drive. If you don't already have a SSD that you're booting from you should just stick to sata, because you really want your OS on a SSD. (Top speed is likely irrelevant if the PC is goes into is too old to support m.2, the rest of your system isn't fast enough to need it.) mike12345 posted:I thought of buying the Intel SSD 660p 2TB at 1800MB/s. From a quick glance it seems like the cheapest/fastest option if I want a non-HDD 2TB drive (~ 200 Euro where I live). The Samsung SSD 860 QVO 2TB costs more or less the same but at half the read/write speed. The 660p and QVO are both quad-level memory drives, which have some downsides. If this is a drive just for games and extra storage they're fine. If this will will be your main drive I'd avoid QLC for anyone who does things besides internet and games. If you can find SanDisk Ultra drives where you are, they're a great option that's cheaper and better than a Samsung QVO. (Same thing as a WD Blue but different branding in some parts of the world.)
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 16:01 |
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Klyith posted:What's more important than top speed is compatibility. Older mobos / chipsets generally can't boot from a NVMe drive. If you don't already have a SSD that you're booting from you should just stick to sata, because you really want your OS on a SSD. Yeah, it's just for games and storage, the system is on a SATA SSD. I checked for San Disk Ultra but they're pretty pricy. Maybe I'll just wait until I build a new pc, but otoh the HDD is really old. eh.
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# ? Dec 30, 2019 16:29 |
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What's the best program to use to clone? My friend got me a SSD which i'm happy about but gently caress it's been a pain in the rear end getting everything ready.
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# ? Jan 2, 2020 02:08 |
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Macrium Reflect has always been my go-to; the free version does everything I need to do when cloning drives.
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# ? Jan 2, 2020 02:34 |
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Macrium works well, as does Paragon Hard Disk Manager.
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# ? Jan 2, 2020 03:06 |
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I've still used nothing but Clonezilla ever since dropping Norton Ghost well over a decade ago. Free, open source, tons of options, and network storage support. I use it for all setups (Linux and Windows), from Windows 9x to Windows 10. Are there any reasons to not use it?
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# ? Jan 2, 2020 23:56 |
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Xenomorph posted:I've still used nothing but Clonezilla ever since dropping Norton Ghost well over a decade ago. I used that back in the day but it was always a boot disc and it didn't always do all the sector alignment stuff. I'm sure it's been updated but most of the new utilities run in windows.
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# ? Jan 3, 2020 00:19 |
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Xenomorph posted:I've still used nothing but Clonezilla ever since dropping Norton Ghost well over a decade ago. Nope, only reasons not to recommend it to other people, ie ease of learning. Though after helping someone in the win10 thread with a macrium reflect issue about resizing partitions, software that doesn't have FAQ pages that point to instructional videos on youtube sounds pretty great, no matter how obtuse the text GUI is.
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# ? Jan 3, 2020 00:34 |
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https://www.tomshardware.com/news/nand-ssd-prices-2020-going-up Just because of a one minute power interruption?
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# ? Jan 3, 2020 18:01 |
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Binary Badger posted:https://www.tomshardware.com/news/nand-ssd-prices-2020-going-up
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# ? Jan 3, 2020 18:23 |
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Binary Badger posted:https://www.tomshardware.com/news/nand-ssd-prices-2020-going-up Remember that these are ovens running at temperatures of thousands of degrees, and the materials science involved is almost like witchcraft considering they're assembling at nanometer scale. The oven itself is too power hungry to run on battery and the process too complicated to simply continue where you left off.
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# ? Jan 3, 2020 19:05 |
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There was a similar power outage at a huge Toshiba+WB fab in 2019 and it didn't change prices at the consumer level, so if the Samsung incident has impact it'll be because the overall demand is growing again. The new video game consoles seem like they'll have a TB of flash storage each. Probably QLC, but even then that's gonna be a fair demand spike. Plus nobody has been building more flash fabs the last two years. But I'm skeptical that prices will actually rise by major amounts -- the big producers were slow-rolling their 96-layer production because of low demand, so they could be adding layers faster if they needed to. So buy a SSD now or the next few months if you need it for the coming year, but don't expect like SSDs this year are gonna be like GPUs during the bitcoin boom.
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# ? Jan 3, 2020 19:40 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 14:52 |
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Ovens are the least of the problems, you have ion implanters and layer growers and so on and anything being processed in those gets to be tossed because you just can't continue where you left off.
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# ? Jan 3, 2020 19:42 |