[dba-Tech] Micron SSD

John Bartow jbartow at winhaven.net
Tue Jun 12 23:51:31 CDT 2018


Yes, just bought a stack of Samsung 250 and 500 GB. They give new life to old puters. Samsung seems to gets good peer recommendations. Micron so-so. I can definitely recommend not using Kindspec brand SSD.

-----Original Message-----
From: dba-Tech <dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com> On Behalf Of Jim Lawrence
Sent: Monday, June 11, 2018 1:49 PM
To: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues <dba-tech at databaseadvisors.com>
Subject: Re: [dba-Tech] Micron SSD

Hi Arthur:

I would think that John B is still in the business of doing small business and home computer repair and I would bet that he replaces spinning-rust with SSDs at every occasion. A good friend (and Geek coffee buddy) who is also still in the biz, upgrades every client he can as they are always totally impressed with their new performance...it is that dramatic.

I think Micron products are good as I have personally never experienced hardware issues. To my understanding, when a SSD fails, unlike the old spinning drives no data becomes inaccessible...you just lose the ability write to the drive. (But I would not use that as an excuse for not keeping those backups regular and frequent.) 

I don't think we will get away from old drive technology for a while yet as large capacity SSD drives are still way too expensive. (I have a bank of 4 and 8 TB harddrives which I use mostly for backups and data sources.)

Jim
 
----- Original Message -----
From: "Arthur Fuller" gmail.com>
To: "Discussion of Hardware and Software issues" databaseadvisors.com>
Sent: Sunday, June 10, 2018 9:42:14 AM
Subject: [dba-Tech] Micron SSD

Recently I bought a --um, I think the platform is generically called an ultrabook. It's small and contains an SSD, my first experience with this technology. In short, Holy S**t, Batman!  Methinks the days of hard disks are rapidly waning. I'm gazing at my Old Faithful, an HP Millenium tower which has only once given me a problem in her entire life, and thinking that maybe I should give her a digital Red Bull, so to speak. Currently she's wearing a pair of hard disks, one 250 GB and one 75GB. I haven't inspected her innards for at least a decade, being satisfied with the Belarc Advisor reports to tell me what's in there.

Given its age, I don't know whether it has a built-in SSD location, or whether I need to remove the skinny hard disk and replace it with the SSD..
I'm hesitant to jump to conclusions regarding any of this. I admit that I'm thinking that this old 'puter would enjoy a transplant, so to speak.

Kindly excuse all the anthropomorphism, but I think of my names for computers as all relating to Arthur, son of Uther Pendragon, etc. (Monty Python has figured largely in my life; John Cleese doing the Minister of Silly Walks still makes me fall off the couch with belly-laughs, not to mention *A Fish Called Wanda. *I digress. My only available apologies are thoughts of the coming World Cup, combined with thoughts of Jamie Lee Curtis -- neither of which concerns the original intent of this message, which was, does anyone have experience with Micron products, and if so, are their products reliable? Secondarily, is one of their SSDs easily installed by a person such as myself, with software skills but seriously lacking in hardware skills?

A.

Being

--
Arthur
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