Hi David, I've only used a single SSD on my Xubuntu systems. As long as you protect it from being written to more than necessary, it's fine. On an ancient system running Xubuntu 2010 LTS with 1 GB of memory (the max) and a 30GB SSD, I can go from cold start to on the internet in 15 secs!
My main question to you would be to ask why you don't just use SSD(s). I recently bought a brand new 128GB one for an iPod for GBP48 on eBay. I'm pretty sure that ordinary ones are considerably less per GB. 10 years ago, when I bought the 30GB one for my ancient laptop (purely run as a toy and designed in the last century!), it cost me £30 second-hand, which hardly broke the bank *then*. Still horses for courses as they say. David Walland On Mon, 8 Apr 2019 at 11:32, David Wright <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi all > > I should hopefully be building a new PC at some point this year and wanted > to gauge opinion on a couple of points. > > 1. SSD - my plan is to have the OS on a nice fast SSD and all my files on > a regular hard-drive. do I have to do anything different during > installation or will Xubuntu "just see" my SSD? > > 2. UEFI - again, do I have to do anything different during the > installation to allow for UEFI? > > Installation will be via USB flashdrive. > > Many thanks as always > David > -- > xubuntu-users mailing list > [email protected] > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-users > -- *A race is won by ability, not skin colour*
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