You can see the difference when you turn your computer on. 20 seconds (SSD) as opposed to 130 seconds(HD). The real question, not answered here, is real world performance for money between a 256 gb SSD and a 3 terabit hd, both at the same price point. Explain that difference in different applications, from startup to how your machine uses it and you have useful info!
This was a very helpful video! Also needs more appreciation and more Views / Likes. Thank you for you research and hard work into making this video! Very much Appreciated :).
Liked the video, however I recently brought a HDD and a SSD and I put music on Both of the drives the SSD plays great in my car but the HDD gives an error? What would I be doing wrong?
Thank you very much, this was really helpful. However i want to ask that if i am using Visual Studio to code, Is it possible to save my files in SSD to save my internal storage?
Hi there, thank you for your question. Yes, it is absolutely possible and common to save your project files, code, and other development-related data on an SSD (Solid State Drive) to save internal storage space on your computer. In fact, using an SSD for development work can often result in faster read and write speeds, leading to quicker project load times and better overall performance.
I HAVE A STUPID QUESTION, once you copy all the lap top on a external drive, are you actually using the hard / external drive info to work on , instead of things on the actual computer ? If so i can delete a lot of things off my lap top and use the external drive instead ???
What you don't explain is that when i analyze disk for defragging it looks like it needs defragging cause there is red blocks everyone more than blue defragged blocks. Thus if SSD doesn't need defragging then why does it have red blocks everywhere on my c drive on my defraggler app that is ssd just like my other hdd drives > i realize c drive always rearranges stuff cause it has windows and programs in it. Thus it must be constantly defragging stuff on c drive. But since its ssd it should defragg it automatically as i thought but it doesn't it just looks ugly red everywhere yet I'm told not to defrag it.
ssd for apps and to run you machine, hdd for main storage, reason ssd quick overall better but has a limit to the amount of times it can be overwritten
What do you mean by “overwritten”? If I’m using my DELL Inspiron 3670, and just use it to play video games and surf the internet, how does “overwritten” apply here?
@@subpoena. They don't have a limit of read and write times like SSD for example. I can keep my hard drives for 10+ years if there is no physical damage externally or internally. Something a heavily used SSD can't do.
What about life span what will last longer I got a HDD 10 Terabyte that's lasted for over a year so far with heavy gaming On My Xbox one X so Yeah what will last longer ?