Yes, but, "old school" ramdisks (i.e. creating disks in existing RAM),
aren't exactly reliable if something goes wrong (i.e. power anomalies, bad
memory block,  etc.).  So whatever you would be storing would have to be
temporary (which I guess you have already said), AND, you would have to NOT
care if you lost it in a production environment.

At least from what I remember of them... but like I said its been a while
for me.  I'm sure someone has tried it before :)

On Thu, Aug 25, 2011 at 11:35 AM, DavidJMurray (mvdbs.com) <[email protected]
> wrote:

>
>
> I mean using the existing RAM within the system to create and mount a small
> file system which a temporary U2 file can be created and used; rather than
> a
> complete SSD device.
>
>
>
> John Thompson-15 wrote:
> >
> > Its expensive... and it seems fairly safe as IBM, HP, and Dell are all
> > selling it now...
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> -----
>
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>
> http://mvdbs.com http://mvdbs.com
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-- 
John Thompson
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