Which SSD

Because people hardly write on their SSDs? Doing so constantly will severly shorten it's lifespan...

Plus there's no need to wait for the drive to buffer, it responds almost instantly unlike HDDs which needs to spin up the disks within before reading/writing from them. It's because of this SSDs feels a lot snappier, regardless of read/write times.
 
Because people hardly write on their SSDs? Doing so constantly will severly shorten it's lifespan...

Plus there's no need to wait for the drive to buffer, it responds almost instantly unlike HDDs which needs to spin up the disks within before reading/writing from them. It's because of this SSDs feels a lot snappier, regardless of read/write times.

Ok but that does not explain why one is better than the other... if anything it seems to be the BSOD issue which is stated to be fixed by OCZ with a firmware upgrade.
 
Would an m4 be a good choice to use for a gaming ssd? My board only has sata II ports so dont know if that would hold it back? Im thinking of just running windows on my standard sata II drive as well as having all my music and movies on a different old sata II drive as well
 
Ok but that does not explain why one is better than the other... if anything it seems to be the BSOD issue which is stated to be fixed by OCZ with a firmware upgrade.

With regards the write speeds, I look at it a bit like this; "my car can do 25mph in reverse but another model can do 40mph". Ok, but in the real world forward speed is far more important (i.e. read speed) and you don't often need to do more than 10 mph backwards anyway. If both cars have exactly the same acceleration and top speed, but one has a history of breaking down a lot, which would you go for? :D

I think that OCZ and/or Corsair may have said in the past that the firmware has been fixed, but it turned out there were still problems, so it *may* be too early to say.

I got an SSD a couple of weeks ago - I went for the Cruicial M4. It was £20 more than the OCZ or Corsair ones but I suppose there were 3 main reasons I choose it:-

1) In benchmarks it may sometimes have scored lower but in these more "real world" tests it actually seemed faster...


2) It may only write at 150MB/sec or whatever, but what do you have that can supply data faster than that? OK if you had 2 SSDs that both read at 500MB/sec and you were copying from between them then a slower write speed would be a bottleneck, but most times it's just small files being written and access time is far more important then.

3) I only have SATA2 anyway so won't get much more than 250MB/sec either way.
 
Is it safe to say getting the M4 now I will definitely have the 09 firmware?

Mine didn't and I only got it last Friday, I had to flash it using a CD and burning an image onto it. make sure you flash it first and then install your OS, I didn't do this and after the firmware upgrade windows 7 kept rebooting at the splash screen.
 
Bummer :( .


I'll wait until the drive already has the new firmware on it... less for me to do :D

Its very very easy to flash, easiest thing I've ever flashed infact. Simply burn the image from Crucials website: http://www.crucial.com/support/firmware.aspx

Boot your computer from the CD/DVD driver and you'll get a dos prompt type screen. The software will recognise your Crucial SSD and tell you its eligible for upgrade. Type yes press enter, wait a few seconds (longer if its a bigger drive) and hey presto your done. Take the CD out and switch off your computer using the power button.Switch your computer back on and enjoy lightening fast SSD action baby! Simple.
 
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