Since SSDs are all solid state now, I wonder if anyone has tried cooling one with liquid nitrogen and overclocking it? Seems the problems would be changing the clock speed, and saturating the data bus?
Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk.
Originally posted by: jimhsu
Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk.
Originally posted by: jimhsu Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk.
Originally posted by: jimhsu Unlike with a hard drive, this is technically possible. It will probably require a custom reflash with a user-modified version of original firmware. No idea how to do it. It's your data though, so use at your own risk.
In the old days before PRML, I think you could actually overclock hard drives, after you do a low-level format and reconfigure the platters, rotation speed, etc. None of that is applicable today of course.
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