Apologies if this reply is a bit late but we've been working abroad.

I have a late 2012 MacBook Pro. I installed a 240GB OWC Mercury Electra Pro 
6G<http://www.allmacshop.co.uk/proddetail/95659/OWC-Mercury-Electra-Pro-6G-240GB-SSD/>in
 the primary bay, then moved the original 750gb rotational drive into an OWC 
Data 
Doubler<http://www.allmacshop.co.uk/proddetail/96474/OWC-Data-Doubler-Optical-Bay-to-HDD-SSD/>
 installed 
in the optical drive bay and also added 16gb of Kingston RAM sourced from Mr 
Memory in Worthing <http://www.mrmemory.co.uk/>.

I have my User Data and Home folder on the rotational drive and everything 
else on the SSD.

>From cold, the computer starts up to a usable desktop in just over 9 
seconds. Photoshop CS6 Extended takes about 3 seconds; Quark 9.5.4 which 
always was a dog takes 11 seconds.

Do not forget to install TRIM 
Enabler<http://www.groths.org/software/trimenabler/>- helps SSDs out a lot.

HOWEVER!!!! it is essential that you have contingency.

When an SSD fails, it is catastrophic and you get NO warning. 

I installed a 480gb Electra Pro 6G in the laptop of a Sussex based, best 
selling author of Crime Thrillers in February of this year. It turned its 
toes up last Monday. He was in London and I was in the South of France. 
That was one long, expensive trip and a sleepless night!

Chris Webb
MacService

On Monday, 25 November 2013 15:42:32 UTC, Graham Perrin wrote:
>
> On Saturday, 23 November 2013 08:24:49 UTC, mac98aop wrote:
>  
>
>> …  do I go for 16GB Ram or 240GB SSD or ideally both? I'm most interested 
>> in speed performance improvements, and recall Sam has said the SSD will 
>> give me the most noticeable impact. 
>>
>> I'm not worried about boot time, but about day to day processing (opening 
>> iPhoto, Safari, Alfred etc...). … 
>>
>
> If you're happy to habitually sleep the Mac (not shut down or restart), 
> then the *greatest amount of memory* will allow the OS to make great use of 
> the unified buffer cache (UBC). Second and subsequent launches of apps will 
> be much faster than first launch. 
>
> The benefits of the UBC go way beyond apps. Broadly speaking, expect *any* 
> data that's read from permanent storage (hard, hybrid or solid state) to be 
> cached in memory – unless the app/process reading the data uses F_NOCACHE 
> for a file. 
>
> Then (without wishing to complicate this topic): the money that you wish 
> to spend on an SSD could be *much* more productively spent on an sshd. More 
> storage your money. 
>
> I have no idea about prices, sorry. 
>

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