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Dmitry Zarezenko2013-07-28 18:11:40
Solid State Drives
Dmitry Zarezenko, 2013-07-28 18:11:40

Speed ​​up your workflow with an external SSD

Recently I noticed that my old laptop does not cope well with my tasks. Often you have to wait until he thinks. My main tasks are editing large photos in Photoshop and programming (projects with a lot of source files). DELL laptop with HDD, noticed that the reason for the brakes is the screw. The question is, is it really possible to solve this problem with an external SSD, transfer active projects and files with which I am currently working to it? There is no way to insert an SSD inside, since I use a laptop. Won't an external drive interface negate the speed of an SSD?

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7 answer(s)
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edogs, 2013-07-28
@edogs

There is no way to insert an SSD inside, because I use a laptop
The point of the argument is not clear. We also use a laptop, but we inserted the same ssd inside.
There is another option - to insert instead of a DVD disc.
Won't an external drive interface negate the speed of an SSD?
If usb3.0, then in general it will not. If usb2.0, then the issue is moot. If esata, then in general it will not.

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oleksandr_veles, 2013-07-28
@oleksandr_veles

IMHO, it's more correct to leave the 1TB HDD in place, put ssd instead of DVD, and make the removed DVD external via USB.

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Emhyr, 2013-07-28
@Emhyr

Put a 128Gb SSD inside as a system drive, and an HHD in an external box to store heavy files. Only this option will give a performance boost, and then provided that the laptop supports SATA 3.0.

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malan, 2013-07-28
@malan

The main advantage of an SSD comes when working with a lot of small files, and here even with USB 2.0 you will feel the superiority of SSS over HDD. In general, take it, you will not regret

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Pilat, 2013-07-29
@Pilat

You may encounter an unreliable USB device in a laptop

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oleksandr_veles, 2013-07-29
@oleksandr_veles

As for the acceleration of work from the use of SSD, my feelings are:
1. If you put the OS on ssd, then the overall system responsiveness will increase, program launch will become faster, reboot, etc.
2. It practically does not affect the work with the photo, it is mainly occupied by the CPU. Converting photos in a converter is not accelerated in any way from ssd.
3. Compilation time will decrease slightly if the project is large.
4. not all ssds still run into sata3 speed, only expensive and new ones. And the main thing in ssd is not linear speed, but random access speed, feel free to put it on sata2 and enjoy :-)

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Equillibrium, 2013-07-30
@Equillibrium

I definitely wouldn't throw money away on an SSD with just a USB 2.0 connection. With the transfer of large files back and forth, it will still be more or less normal, but the system will cope with a bunch of small files for a long time. Modern SSDs already load SATA 3 quite seriously, let alone 480 Mbps from USB 2 /
But putting the SSD inside, and making the hard drive external (or an adapter in the ODD slot and putting the hard drive there) is the best upgrade in the world!

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