Am 02.11.2010 19:49, schrieb Joe Hartley:
On Tue, 02 Nov 2010 19:19:18 +0100
Benjamin Freitag <benjamin(a)die-guten-partei.de> wrote:
If you need high speed access(e.g. live
transmission), become aware how
cheap ram is today, and try to use something like the following command:
"mount -o size=2000M -t tmpfs none /media/ram"
No SSD can beat that...(actually)
But the SSD will retain its data when the machine crashes, or the power goes
out, or when the drummer decides to find out what that button does (it turns
the UPS on and off, doofus). I'd never record to a RAM disk because there's
always an additional step needed to write to the "real" storage. Even if
you use rsync to only write what's new, there may be significant delays while
you do the dump.
Hey, linux machines dont crash as long as your proggies are compiled n
programmed correctly.
And even when, have you heard about buffers(also those of you ssd?), to
counter effects like low speeds when fragmentation occurs, thats not an
argument "when your machine crashes".
And why is the drummer sitting next to the UPS and you didnt tell him he
IS THERE FOR DRUMMING, not manipulating your systems?
In the end,
applied correctly SSDs may speed up your workflow,
but cheap or faulty SSDs may destroy your whole contractors data.
So can bad RAM and/or bad hard drives. In my experience SSDs are now no
more or less prone to problems than any other part of the computer. Backups
should be approached like voting in Chicago - early and often!
And "in your experience" is how many years?
The 1.000.000 hrs MTBF is calculated when running 1000 drives for 1000
hrs and one starts to fail,
so every 1000 customers it may happen. Yes wear level algorithms became
better, and yes it all becomes better, but still the testing time was
too low for final statements.
For the money
of two cheap SSD(needed for solid performance)
you may buy an old server with wnough ram slots an redundant gigabit(min
2000MB/s) and you are just fine
It'd be extremely hard to find a server that runs quietly enough for a
studio
environment. I have a nice tower that was designed to be as quiet as possible.
Putting SSDs in will allow me to make it even quieter than it is now.
I do agree that having 2 mirrored drives is more secure, though.
Not secure, i mean speed, ssds still go down in read/write speeds when
you have fragmented disks
Security only comes by Backups.
I love SSDs when recording in live venues, because heavy low subs WILL
kill HDs sooner or later.
I hate my G.Skill with JMF602b because it had a short circuit via
USB(faulty port on the disk ) and now all e-mails, bills etc are lost.
Just think about it..
Youll never be 100% safe, but you may try..
C Ya