SilverStone Device Gives 70% HDD Boost
SilverStone's HDDBOOST combines the best of both worlds: HDD and SSD.
Now this looks rather cool: TweakTown points the way to a device designed by SilverStone that merges the traditional, clunky HDD with the flashy, new SDD format. Called HDDBOOST, the device itself is mounted within a 3.5-inch drive bay which in turn houses an SSD. A separate HDD, mounted in its usual seat within the PC, is connected to the device by way of a second SATA port. This allows both drives to communicate together like some kind of hybrid storage setup.
SilverStone said that the HDDBOOST will mirror the front-end data of the HDD to the SDD. This allows the PC to read the more commonly used files from the faster drive. This setup also reduces the overall wear and tear on the SSD by throwing all the new writes onto the older HDD, essentially allowing the SSD to perform like a huge cache for the mechanical drive.
So what's the point of this? Good question. Tossing the HDD aside and using the SDD as the primary boot drive makes more sense: it's faster and somewhat more reliable. But what if consumers want an extra boost without having to disrupt the current system configuration? What if they don't want to re-install the OS and software, or restore the system from an external backup? This option seems less disruptive while providing a significant performance increase.
"Depending on the speed of the SSD added, the HDDBOOST can increase the performance of an existing host hard drive up to 70-percent," the company said. "This speed increase is very noticeable and significant for any PC users that have not experienced using SSD drives before."
SilverStone products are sold at TigerDirect.com, Fty's Electronics, Circuit City, Amazon, and more. Stonebridge Computing has the device listed for $51.98 right here.
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seems like a cheap trick that will end up not making much difference anyways...
my 100mb/s with HDD is fast enough anyways
becasue of the combined cost
why not wait till the pci ssd's are realise (cheaply) and get one instead becasue this will disapear in a few years when ssd's become cheaper (eventually ssd's will pack more storage after all they are still in there infancy)
not quite sure what's the point...
Whoever is willing to spend money on SSD will have enough knowledge to reinstall (and not loose) your old system... not to mention that you can actually "copy" a live system from HDD to SSD... Pointless device I am afraid... And when I get a SSD - I would like most out of it... what's the point of slowing it down by normal drive?
Well if you have £1,200 to buy a 512GB SSD you obviously don't buy this, but, and it your budget is only £60-150 you buy a standard 1-2TB HDD, but if you have a budget of say around £300, you could get this device (~£40), plus a 32GB SSD (say 32GB Corsair X32 for £110) and a 2TB HDD (~£150).
But looking at the Q&A ( http://www.silverstonetek.com/qa/q [...] T&area=usa ), it doesn't exactly seem perfect (i.e. regular reboots are recommended).
I would say in most cases a simple RAID of HHDs would be more cost effective.
its not just about the speed, problem is like :
the more you write the slower it becomes. and also there is a limit on how much data you can writ and read. its in the technical archi. so this might be a good option.