I caught a sale on a new Acer laptop a few weeks ago; 16GB RAM and 1TB SSD "hard drive". I'm fond of Acers because I've found them to be particularly Linux-friendly drivers-wise but this will be my first experience with an SSD.
I know it'll break all kinds of read/write speed records but are there any cautions or concerns I should know about as far as its use and upkeep goes? Any gotchas?
Thanks.
Don't defrag is the only one I can think of.
When you Solid State Drive fails, everything is gone. Best to keep it as the OS drive.
Thanks for the replies. I run Debian Linux and I'm initially concerned about the by-default 'wipe' Debian does before beginning the installation. I believe it writes random 1s and 0s to the entire drive. That's great for security but writing to the entire drive is supposed to be bad news for SDDs according to my research (it also takes frackin' forever!). I'm pretty sure you can skip that during the install but I've never skipped it and am not 100% sure. I know formatting is a different animal with SDDs. Going back to school, I guess...
jerryc41 wrote:
I bought a similar one over a year ago. Nice unit... (
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Funny... Apple's new Mac Studio uses solid state storage that runs at 7.4 GB/second, which is ideal for video editing and production. SSD failure rates are very low. At this point, conventional hard drives make the most sense for long term storage, not daily use for active projects. If you're editing 8K raw video, a conventional spinning platter won't work at all.
TriX
Loc: Raleigh, NC
kernel bleep wrote:
Thanks for the replies. I run Debian Linux and I'm initially concerned about the by-default 'wipe' Debian does before beginning the installation. I believe it writes random 1s and 0s to the entire drive. That's great for security but writing to the entire drive is supposed to be bad news for SDDs according to my research (it also takes frackin' forever!). I'm pretty sure you can skip that during the install but I've never skipped it and am not 100% sure. I know formatting is a different animal with SDDs. Going back to school, I guess...
Thanks for the replies. I run Debian Linux and I'm... (
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I would not let it write the entire drive - I would skip that step
I use Linux mint and have two ssd's on my main computer. One (I just installed) is a 1 TB NVMe. The other is a 224 GB sata drive. I have had much success with the sata drives on multiple computers. The NVMe is much faster (about twice). I treat them like a normal sata drive. Also I format them in GPT not MBR. Google "Rodrick Smith Hard Drive Formatting" if not sure about this. GPT is much better. Also I suggest you install the "Home" folder in its own partition.It will simplify upgrading in the future.
You think a regular SSD is fast wait until you get a NVME2 on the motherboard. My PC from pushing the button to turn it on to usefulness is less than 4 seconds. It's awesome!!!!
OleMe
Loc: Montgomery Co., MD
No need to do the over write. If there's old data, it will be overwritten anyway.
I second putting /home on a separate partition.
Been usung Linuxfor 20 years. It's great.
/Roger
Thanks, all. The laptop was bought for future use so it's going to be on ice for a while. Thanks for those health check sites and suggestions.
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