Silverstone HDDBoost uses an SSD as read cache for HDDs

Comments

  • BuddyJBuddyJ Dept. of Propaganda OKC Icrontian
    edited February 2010
    Oh man, what a sweet little device. It sounds like it's both simple and effective.
  • KometeKomete Member
    edited February 2010
    This has promise. Would be better if say WD came out with a line a Raptors that handled this internally.
  • SnarkasmSnarkasm Madison, WI Icrontian
    edited February 2010
    In theory, it's not much different from Intel's old Turbo Memory, but on a larger scale. Hybrids like that aren't particularly new ideas, but this has a nice "you don't really have to worry about it" kind of feel to it.
  • edited February 2010
    Nice device and writeup. Thanks Thrax.
  • GargGarg Purveyor of Lincoln Nightmares Icrontian
    edited February 2010
    That's pretty stinking awesome. Nice writeup, Thrax!
  • DrLiamDrLiam British Columbia
    edited February 2010
    This is an item I would really consider buying but the price of SSDs are still a little high for my taste. Great preview, thank you!
  • AlexDeGruvenAlexDeGruven Wut? Meechigan Icrontian
    edited February 2010
    DrLiam wrote:
    This is an item I would really consider buying but the price of SSDs are still a little high for my taste. Great preview, thank you!

    It all depends on what you want to boost, really. You could get away with a much smaller device and still drastically increase boot times (provided you actually reboot your computer. I mean, really. Who does that?).

    Looks like a great device that will hopefully encourage more people to purchase SSDs, and start lowering the cost of the larger SSDs even more.
  • edited February 2010
    This is nothing new. Support has been here since 2006 with Vista's ReadyDrive, and Intel Turbo Memory has been available on Centrino laptops for nearly as long.
  • AlexDeGruvenAlexDeGruven Wut? Meechigan Icrontian
    edited February 2010
    Jason404 wrote:
    This is nothing new. Support has been here since 2006 with Vista's ReadyDrive, and Intel Turbo Memory has been available on Centrino laptops for nearly as long.

    It's not a new concept, for sure. Hybrid Hard Drives have been around for a while, but never really hit wide adoption (marketing fail, IMO).

    This unit essentially allows you to construct a HybridHDD.
  • ThraxThrax 🐌 Austin, TX Icrontian
    edited February 2010
    And those concepts failed because they used shitty flash. This is quite a bit different from a performance perspective.
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