Just want to expressed my experience. For me, I do feel the difference because I'm an IT support and many of the end users here move their files a lot. And we would order SSD for their laptops and they would report significant difference. Also even just opening programs such as adobe, microsoft office etc, it opens like instantly compared to a 7200 rpm drive.
Just want to expressed my experience. For me, I do feel the difference because I'm an IT support and many of the end users here move their files a lot. And we would order SSD for their laptops and they would report significant difference. Also even just opening programs such as adobe, microsoft office etc, it opens like instantly compared to a 7200 rpm drive.
Me neither but I wasn't going to argue. For all we know he might not even be getting half the performance he's supposed to be getting because of some misconfiguration. But oh well.
Loading big apps like Adobe premier would show the difference but the OP does have a point that an ssd isn't an automatic win all of the time. It might breathe life into some old computers where the cpu still isn't too old.
I'm also rethinking ssd's for grandparent/basic pc's due to the type of data corruption that happens to ssd's in a power outage, because a harddisk isn't a hardship when it comes to performance in such a light usage scenario.
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