How good would one of these really be compared to a VR for a main desktop machine?
I only want a single os drive but the writes really put me off.
would this work ok in a laptop? laptop takes a regular sata 2.5" drive
thanks
Access times are much improved. For an OS drive how much of your use is writing v. reading?
It's pretty much a no-brainer - it will feel a lot faster than the VR. Try running AS Benchmark on a VR and comparing results. The Kingston may lose out in some tests, but in the important ones the VR will be no where near. It's all about balance.
Yes. I have put one in a netbook, straight swap as these SSDs are 2.5" SATA drives.
ask your self this. how old is the oldest HD in your machine at the moment
I'm very surprised OCUK haven't got these into stock yet with all the positive attention they're getting.
Some great feedback in here, sadly I've just had an email from my supplier saying I'm going to have to wait for stock despite it saying they had some at time of ordering - I hate it when companies do that!!
A
No. The V+ series use a completely different controller and firmware.
The chances of getting TRIM support on the 40Gb V appear to be basically nil at this point. Kingston has dumped Intel as a partner (or possibly the other way around, it's not clear which) which means no firmware updates.
All my Kingston SSDNow V 40gb drives came with firmware 02HA which supports TRIM.
No it doesn't, and Intel have refused to supply Kingston with updated firmware which enables trim, which is why they've now withdrawn it and are replacing it with a cheaper 30GB SSD using a Toshiba controller and flash.
Fortunately some kind person on the net has published details of how to flash the latest Intel firmware (which does support TRIM) into the Kingston drive -- at your own risk, of course...
Have you got a link please ?