Real-World Benefits
TH: We obviously do a lot of benchmarking on Tom’s. What’s the official rule on how people should condition their SSDs for proper testing?
LK: For us at Kingston, it's no secret. We just take Iometer and run it through a 4K, 100%, random write test. Iometer will basically fill up the drive so every piece of NAND, essentially every cell, now has data, and then it's benchmarked at that point. That process levels off the drive very quickly. If you take a brand new SSD from Kingston, create a partition, format it, and run any kind of benchmark. You'll get a monster number. But as soon as you go back and level that off with something like Iometer, you'll see that number settle into a consistent result. And the number that we publish publically is that leveled-off number.
TC: I think we do a 5- or 10-minute Iometer test. You'll see the drive level off when you're doing that. Another way is to run a secure erase before the benchmark. From then on, the drive will be conditioned.
TH: Do competing brands use the same process when they state their numbers?
LK: Funny that you mention that. We do a lot of competitive analysis, but I don't think we do too much comparison to their marketing sheets. But based on the reviews I've seen, it seems like the numbers match up. You’d be pretty dumb not to because those numbers will drop pretty quickly.
TH: I have a cousin who borrowed my X25-M for his gaming rig at PDXLAN, thinking it was going to change his entire universe. After the event, he admitted that he really couldn't tell much of a difference, and I was like, “Dude, your game is going to be limited by your graphics card or CPU, not your drive. What did you expect?” So let’s clear this up. What are the top applications that people actually do need SSDs for?
LK: On the client side, for me, it’s all about boot times and being able to open up applications. Here in the office, we use Lotus Notes for email, which can be slow starting up. When I click on that icon to launch Lotus Notes from a hard drive, I'm waiting seconds and seconds and seconds for that password prompt to come up. With an SSD, it’s like I blink and it’s there. Or one common response from first-time users is, “Holy cow! My system’s booted already!” And we have all these little agents—anti-virus, firewalls, a bunch of stuff that the hard drive has to chew through even once it hits the desktop. For me, that's where SSD has really shined. Yes, with gaming, your levels will load quicker. If I'm playing Halo or whatever, the map will load faster from the drive, but the game play itself? I don't think that's going to make a big difference. Gaming like at PDXLAN, that's mostly about processor and GPU and RAM. From the corporate IT side, we've also heard a lot of good things on the encryption stuff. When we have corporate customers running encryption software, running it on SSDs seems to help with the transition from HDDs. In terms of the original image being created, we've heard numbers as bad as four hours to build an image and encrypt it. After switching to our SSDs, that dropped to one hour. That's huge.
- Storage,
- Business Storage,
- kingston ,
- ssdnow ,
- ssd
Latest Internal Storage News
- 09/02 – Laser Heat Used to Make HDD Write Transfers Faster
- 07/02 – Intel Introduces New 520 Series Line of SSDs
- 02/02 – Seagate Believes HDD Supply Disruption to Continue in 2012
- 01/02 – Other World Computing (OWC) Reveals Two New SSDs
- 28/01 – Cleversafe Announces 10 Exabyte Storage System Configuration
Latest Internal Storage reviews
- 09/02 – Momentus XT 750 GB Review: A Second-Gen Hybrid Hard Drive
- 06/02 – Intel SSD 520 Review: Taking Back The High-End With SandForce
- 01/02 – Upgrade Advice: Does Your Fast SSD Really Need SATA 6Gb/s?
- 26/01 – Install A Hard Drive Or SSD In Your Notebook's Optical Bay
- 24/01 – Best SSDs For The Money: January 2012

Thanks for that, very interesting. I found the video of the baseball bat test; robust little drive, isn't it?
If I have an SSD as a boot drive and a mechanical hard drive for mass storage, am I better off putting the Windows swap on the mechanical drive?
Also, will I kill an SSD in short order if I put an encrypted volume (e.g. TrueCrypt) on it that uses most of the space on the drive?
Alan.
interesting
1mill hours divided by 24 =41,666 divide 365 = 114 somehow i dont think they will run constantly for 100+ years
Why is that video not on the article?! Come on I bet you anything you when looking for it after you finished speaking with them.
pitty they are still so expensive. cant wait to get 1
A pity that Kingston didn't make sure they were going to be allowed to have TRIM support on the Intel-based 40GB SSDNow drive. People who bought them were lied to by Kingston (who said that TRIM would be supported) and have had to hack firmware to enable TRIM. There have been no explanations or apologies from either Kingston or Intel and as a result, I for one would be wary of companies who treat their customers in such a shoddy way.
If you use SSD's in a Raid, does Windows 7 still use TRIM. Also, does Windows Web Server 2008 R2 use TRIM with SSD's in a Raid?
Thanks,
What a great blog about SSD's. It answers many questions I have. So Would it be correct for me to assume that if I used an Intel Motherboard wtih the built-in ICH10R controller running Windows 7 or Windows Web Server 2008 R2 (I think it is base on Windows 7) in a Raid 5 configuration, 4 drives (3 for the Striping Array and 1 for the parity) would maximize on its potential. Also, would I notice much improvement with an external RAID controller. I will be using the Intel S5520HCR motherboard and the 2 XEON X5650 processors.
Thanks