Michael-
I use $20 SSDs from Newegg and they work fine for general use. SSDs are
direct replacements for mechanical drives. For a low budget you can just
duct tape them in place if needed. Not a problem. You will be amazed at
how much faster they are. Good luck.
-Dave
On 5/18/2019 9:06 AM, Michael Barnes wrote:
I haven't messed with much in the hardware department for years. I recently
picked up a small 12V computer I want to use for some field applications in
ham radio. It presently has a conventional 160 GB SATA WD Caviar Blue drive
in it now. I'd like to replace that with a comparable SSD that is hopefully
just plug and play with the existing SATA connectors. Is that possible? My
intent is to just load a basic Linux install (probably CentOS) from a USB
stick and run a few basic services. It will have a USB GPS puck and run
gpsd and ntp. I'll run the normal network server stuff of dhcp, dns, etc. I
guess Samba is still the thing for a file server. It will not be connected
to the Internet when in the field. The field network will be a bunch of
Windows laptops and will need to share some files across the network with
the server.
So, all that to ask, what should I get for an SSD for this thing? This is a
low budget project.
Thanks for your ideas.
Michael
_______________________________________________
PLUG mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
_______________________________________________
PLUG mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug