On May 26, 2011, at 4:36 PM, Kevin K wrote:
On May 26, 2011, at 3:49 AM, Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
On 5/26/11, John Hodrien J.H.Hodrien@leeds.ac.uk wrote:
Spinning disks seem an awful lot like victorian technology taken too far. In the long term, what's *not* to like about the idea of fully solid state storage?
Personally, I'm averse to using SSD with any important long term data is the nightmare that I could one day wake up to find everything gone without any means of recovery. Compared that to a hard disk, which barring catastrophic physical damage, I could pay somebody to just read the data off the platter.
As a performance boosting intermediary storage, yes, long term... maybe not quite yet
multiple layers of backup. My main system has a main system. With scheduled backups to an external hard drive, and online. I have a lot of data on it like pictures that I wouldn't want to lose. A SSD would replace my main boot drive, with faster access to data as used. But the external drive would still be there for backup.
I back up to traditional disk/tape as well.
Thing is, even though I use the Intel X25M for a mostly read only app server, there is still the issue on TRIM.
In Windows and OSX its easy to get TRIM working, does any know of TRIM for linux?
Also, for rock solid write performance, I've been using the IOExtreme which is pricy, hence biz use only. Its not bootable but very good read/write reliable I/O.
- aurf