I agree with X-Warrior: By the time my SSD bites the big one, there will be larger and faster ones for less money. It's not going to be handed down to my grandchildren.
For my own part, I have a 64 GB OCZ Agility, which was a good price for the time when I got it. My main application is World of Warcraft. I have Windows 7, WoW, Folding@home, and a few small utilities on the SSD, and they fit well, though the latest big patch overflowed and I had to swap the game folder to the mechanical HD and back. (I have a mirrored RAID array, 2x1 TB, both WD Caviar Green.)
The SSD's speed disappointed me. It is faster than a mechanical, but not up to the specs posted on OCZ's site. And while I do have enough technical competency to build my own PC, diagnosing what little part of Windows or the electronics is diminishing the speed isn't in my repertoire. Still, one of the benefits for me is that it's quiet. I hate noisy PCs.
One of the problems you run into with a SSD/MHD hybrid is that you always have to use the Custom option in installation, because your boot drive will always be the default target. This doesn't take much training, but you do have to be aware of the temporary files placed by Steam, Amazon Games, and others-- there's often a setting to get them onto another drive.
I was surprised to learn, though, that (as an earlier reader posted) ReadyBoost exercises the HD. is this true? I have a 4 GB flash drive permenantly stuck into my PC, devoted to that-- and I'm not sure it's making a great difference, but I have it there anyway. Does it in fact cause more reads and writes than it should?
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