Hi all,
Just wondering if i need anything special to connect the X25-M 80gb to a motherboard?
I think its the basic OEM version
Thanks
,,, and like last poster said,, Installed mine today, I installed it in a 3.5" bay using an adaptor from a high street shop bought for £10. Fit rather nicely. So far not overly impressed, my raptorX performed quite well anyway.
160GB = fail tbh. 80GB is plenty for the stuff that actually needs to be fast for >95% of people - the extra £150 or wtv it is for the extra 80GB just isn't worth it.
Dude your post makes very little sense. 160gb is fail? Actually it is known that the 160gb drives are slightly better performing than the 80gb. Also if you want to have to use a platter drive less, you WILL need the extra room. I could have gone with the 128gb crucial but after the price increases I felt less hard done by going with the slightly superior (performance and storage intel). Technically the drive will last longer as it can store more with each cycle. It replaced at 150gb RaptorX as my system drive so 160gb is fine.160GB = fail tbh. 80GB is plenty for the stuff that actually needs to be fast for >95% of people - the extra £150 or wtv it is for the extra 80GB just isn't worth it.
Dude your post makes very little sense. 160gb is fail? Actually it is known that the 160gb drives are slightly better performing than the 80gb. Also if you want to have to use a platter drive less, you WILL need the extra room. I could have gone with the 128gb crucial but after the price increases I felt less hard done by going with the slightly superior (performance and storage intel). Technically the drive will last longer as it can do more cycles. It replaced at 150gb RaptorX as my system drive so 160gb is fine.
I have all my main programs, commonly used documents (I mean word docs etc, not large memory sapping files like music/videos) and a load of games installed at the same time rather than having to swap things out to platter drive or delete a game to install a new one.
To me it was worth the difference, 80gb is nothing. I have a TB worth of data and I want to get the most out of my SSD by minimising use of platter drives aside from mass storage and media.
True, tbh this isn't really an important point, was just mentioning it.Performance increase is negligible outside of benchmarks;
Fair point, though that said, I still have comps with operational drives that are 12 years old, so the extra longevity through bigger cycles does count for something, albeit not much. Also they are rated for 100gb writes per day, 20gb was what manufacturers wanted, Intel went 5x betterdrive lifespan is irrelevant as even the 80GB will last >5years writing >20GB data/day to it.

It doesn't follow to say that because you can install an SSD and enjoy a boot in less than 10 secs, you need one at all! The difference coming from say a Raptor or even just a modern 7200rpm drive just isn't THAT dramatic.It doesn't follow that just because you can fill a 160GB drive, you need to
Why less so with games? To me that was a chunk of the point of it. By the time I have my OS Games Programs and documents on, I'd already be nearing the limit of an 80gb. More room is futureproof. Don't forget some games are 20GB alone these days!by far the most benefit is from having OS/progs, maybe docs on SSD. Games - less so, apart from things like WoW.
I just upgraded with 1.5TB of space, RAM is not cost effective at the moment, I already have 4GB and there's no need for more at the moment. I am sure there are more than 5% of people to whom the extra space would be useful. I am also happy with my graphics card for now, but intend to upgrade soon anyway, so it's not exactly a case of opportunity cost.Are you really saying the £150 extra you spent on that extra 80GB was worth it over upgrading graphics or an extra 1.5TB space, more RAM, etc? If it was worth it, fair enough - but I maintain you will be in <5% of people for whom that is true.
Why less so with games? To me that was a chunk of the point of it. By the time I have my OS Games Programs and documents on, I'd already be nearing the limit of an 80gb. More room is futureproof. Don't forget some games are 20GB alone these days!


I just upgraded with 1.5TB of space, RAM is not cost effective at the moment, I already have 4GB and there's no need for more at the moment. I am sure there are more than 5% of people to whom the extra space would be useful. I am also happy with my graphics card for now, but intend to upgrade soon anyway, so it's not exactly a case of opportunity cost.
My final and somewhat more glaring point. By the time I build my next PC, SSDs will probably have moved on to SATAIII and perform even faster so I will probably get a newer one.
I intend to get a MacBook Pro fairly soon, so I will use this drive in my laptop when I get it (they are generally slower to move onto new standards anyway, I intend to pick one up next refresh. Since you can only fit one drive in a laptop, the bigger the better. Yes, I could have waited till I have my laptop, but I can enjoy the SSD performance while I wait.
esp. as I'm a bit of a data monkey 

True, but for most things, loading times are pretty short anyway (assuming a modern SATA II drive with decent cache - a WD Caviar Black, Spinpoint F3 or similar). Going from a 30 second boot time to 10 second isn't going to change your life.Because for most games, loading times are pretty short anyway.
Well, say you play FPS, getting into the map first has it's advantages, you get more time to familiarise yourself, select a team, warm up etc. It does have it's advantages. On public servers you don't wait for other people anyway. Also if you crash or need to reboot for whatever reason, you can get back to your game with less interruption.If you game online, you'll still be held up by everyone else. I'm not saying there's no improvement with games, I'm saying that for most people, the improvement for games won't be worth £150 compared to what else they could spend £150 on
True, but I argued that I have more programs and games and so on that I want to take advantage of my SSD with so it does affect their responsiveness.and certainly, the second 80GB has less of an effect on system responsiveness/speed than the first.
TBH it does work for me, because it won't be an extra £150 by the time it rolls around. I would have bought the same new card either way. I happen to think there is usually very much a sweet spot of value for money with graphics cards, just like you do with SSDs. I make my choice based on that, not on what upgrades I have spent money on previously. I don't set myself a budget, I just upgrade when I feel the need to.Arguing that you were planning on upgrading soon therefore don't need to spend that money on upgrading now, doesn't work - unless you've decided that an extra £150 isn't worth spending on the graphics. In which case, fair enoughIf that makes any sense
![]()
Aye, agreed on all points. Everything is always getting cheaper, faster, bigger (or smaller, rather, in terms of physical size), so yeah. I think the X25-M series is good value for money, don't forget that it is MLC, which is the 'cheap' or 'value' series anyway. I think the drive is good, with price per gb being lower at 160gb and it being less affected by price fluxes, it just made sense to me, especially since I can stick it in a laptop later and get a newer one for my next build.Laptops actually are one place I hadn't considered where having a bigger SSD makes more sense. Plus I just got a new laptop which has two hard drive bays, which = winesp. as I'm a bit of a data monkey
Futureproofing does make sense in the medium-term. But in the short-term you have less disposable income (obviously not a problem) and in the long-term, cheaper, faster and bigger drives will be out rendering the expensive investment obsolete.
I concede the proportion of people who will gain a significant benefit by having the larger SSD may be somewhat bigger than I first thought.![]()
