What ho one and all,
Received an e-mail with this offer.
Attachment 13753
£25 seem too good to be true, but may be I am missing something. Would it speed up my Dell which only has SATA2 connections?
Toodle pip
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What ho one and all,
Received an e-mail with this offer.
Attachment 13753
£25 seem too good to be true, but may be I am missing something. Would it speed up my Dell which only has SATA2 connections?
Toodle pip
£28 is the best I found. Yes, I converted the dollars to £
http://www.amazon.com/Kingston-Digit.../dp/B00A1ZTZOG
My laptop
15 second bootup, so yes I will keep a SSD in this old rig. Programs open bunches quicker, files save quicker, so yes, it was worth the expense. And of coarse the battery lsure seems to last a bit longer.Code:Machine: System: Dell (portable) product: Latitude D630
Mobo: Dell model: 0KU184 Bios: Dell v: A15 date: 11/24/2008
Sure wish SSDs had been available when I messed with videos.
Probably should have mentioned the 'my old Dell' is a Dimension 9200 running XP Pro.
Is this SSD still OK?
Presumably, I could partition the SSD for OS and Docs. then using an Acronis True Image of my OS, copy it to the SSD?
Tips for using an SSD on Windows XP:
https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/...d-state-drive/
http://www.howtogeek.com/165472/6-th...-state-drives/
XP does not support TRIM, so you would need TRIM support rom the SSD manufacturer.
On the partitioning, how much data do you have? This is only a 120 GB drive, so you may want to use it or the OS, and a magnetic drive for the data.
Thanks for the links.
At the moment, I have three HDD, 500 / 250 / 500, with the OS and MyDocs as two partitions on Disk 0, with 60gb and 40gb each. The os partition is around 75% full, MyDocs around 50% full. I could release space on the os by uninstalling a lot of programs that I have not used in years, but...............
May be my plan would be to get the SSD for the os, and a 1tb HDD for the second disk, leaving the third as it currently is.
Also which version of True Image do you have? Only newer ones have SSD support.
https://kb.acronis.com/solid-state-d...ronis-products
I normally do a clean install on the new SSD and then plug in the other drives where the old C:\ is next and add the BIG drive next.Quote:
May be my plan would be to get the SSD for the os, and a 1tb HDD for the second disk, leaving the third as it currently is.
It is about the same age as this laptop. And newer than my Dell Optiplex 755 which I am using to BETA test Win 10, and 3 linux distros using SSDs. I just swap the leads to the correct SSD to boot that OS. It takes about 20 seconds to boot, but that delay is caused by the silly BIOS it has.
I don't think my version of ATI has SSD support. That would have to be sorted.
Yes, I do agree that doing a clean install would be the preferable way forward. I like XP, but may be up-grading the W7 would be something to think about.
SSDs work fine for me. Glad I went that route now.
Upgrading to W7 would be what I would do for now but if you want to clone XP to a new drive then the new SSD drive might come with software to do that. Usually a new but feature limited version of True Image.