Hi all, I read Alexander's reply with interest at [1] .
@Alexander, thank you for taking time to answer my question/s . Maybe you can CC me the next time :) What was also interesting in your answer was the use of dark marketing practises used by some manufacturers to disguise TLC (3-bit NAND) memory chips as MLC ones but haven't shared either literature or any tools to tell them apart. I do remember and have seen similar USB pendrives who claim to have 16/32 GB but when you use them, they don't work at least with USB 2.0 . I have been told by some people that for such 'big drives' usually usb 3.0/3.1 is good but as don't have access to such ports it's neither here or there. Anyways, most places even airports usually have usb 2.0 ports rather than usb 3.0/3.1 but that's a different argument or point altogether (the whole usb 2.0/3.0/3.1 stuff.) You shared something called TBW or DWPD ratings for SSD but again didn't share anything about that. Any links or literature which will help me find a bit more about them and perhaps what you have used it for ? My workload varies, sometimes it is compiling, sometimes it is running some tests, sometimes doing gaming and sometimes just browsing and using multimedia (movies etc.) . So my idea and stress would be general system improvements and response times. Also my budget is not that great, at the most I could afford is either a 500 GB to 1 TB I have also been reading about multi-actuator heads [2] in traditional HDD's but guessing they will be probably be priced and used by enterprise more rather than the enthusiast class at least in the beginning. I also have read blackbaze hdd failures to get some ideas about what's good or not even though their use-case scenario is far bigger than mine.[3] For e.g. for me the question would be how to deal with backups and crashes if a time comes, as checking 4 TB hdd's is also insane, at least in my puny setup. Looking forward to know more. 1. https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2019/12/msg00726.html 2. https://blog.seagate.com/craftsman-ship/multi-actuator-technology-a-new-performance-breakthrough/ 3. https://www.backblaze.com/blog/hard-drive-reliability-stats-q1-2016/ -- Regards, Shirish Agarwal शिरीष अग्रवाल My quotes in this email licensed under CC 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ http://flossexperiences.wordpress.com E493 D466 6D67 59F5 1FD0 930F 870E 9A5B 5869 609C