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|    alt.os.linux.ubuntu    |    I preferred Xubuntu, seemed a bit faster    |    134,474 messages    |
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|    Message 134,054 of 134,474    |
|    The Natural Philosopher to Paul    |
|    Re: Modifying a SATA only motherboard    |
|    09 Oct 24 13:04:34    |
      XPost: alt.os.linux.mint, alt.os.linux.mageia, uk.d-i-y       From: tnp@invalid.invalid              On 09/10/2024 10:52, Paul wrote:       > On Tue, 10/8/2024 4:05 PM, pinnerite wrote:       >> I have a Gigabyte miniATX motherboard with 4 SATA HDD sockets.       >> I wondered if I could replace the hard drive with an M.2 SSD       >> provided I could find some kind of adapter.       >>       >> There appear to be loads of devices advertised but I cannot be sure       >> that they would fulfill my need.       >>       >> Has anyone tried this?       >>       >> TIA       >>       >> Alan       >       > Presumably there is a reason for this adventure ?       >       > Was the hard drive being naughty ?       >       > Just a plain old SATAIII SSD 2.5" drive (like you might       > use in a laptop), can run at a SATA III rate. Because you       > didn't name the motherboard model number, we can't guess       > what controller is in there. Nor for that matter, how       > spiffy your PCIe slots are. Your motherboard could be a       > 9.6" x 9.6" microATX (full size ATX is 12" high).       >       > $ inxi -F       > Machine:       > Type: Desktop Mobo: Micro-Star model: MPG B550 GAMING PLUS (MS-7C56) v:       1.0       > v: 1.I0 date: 07/13/2024       > CPU:       > Info: 8-core model: AMD Ryzen 7 5700G bits: 64 type: MT MCP cache: L2:       4 MiB       > Drives:       > ID-1: /dev/sda vendor: Samsung model: SSD 870 EVO 4TB size: 3.64 TiB        <=== boot drive       >       > When it comes to measuring them, computers are particularly clever.       > For example, this machine has invariant RDTSC and yet speed measurement       > of disks does not agree when performed by two different OSes.       > This is captured on a Zen3 B550 system (Asmedia Southbridge).       >       > [Picture] Comparison of benchmarks of SATA SSDs on LM213 and Windows       >       > https://i.postimg.cc/nrkVdbVn/munchkin-racing.gif       >       > The only thing I have against NVMe, is the installation is a       > bit fiddly, the screw is a nuisance. I own just one sample NVMe       > and most of the time, it sits in the little cardboard box.       >       > It would be nice, if they used good flash in SSDs, but that's never going       > to happen. SLC, MLC, (TLC,QLC,PLC) the downward descent continues.       > Bog roll for the win.       >       > You can see in the bench picture, the drive at the bottom was       > bought as an "experiment in cheapness". And the error corrector       > can only manage about 285 MB/sec or so. The sectors aren't being       > spared out, and while re-writing them might be fun, it might not       > achieve the desired result. I wanted to see if the cheap drive       > behaved like my bad USB flash sticks or not.       >       > You have to decide whether this storage device is to be bootable, or not.       >       > Paul       Ive used SATA style SSDs and they are a lot faster than spinning rust.              Just how fast does a disk need to be?              --       "It is an established fact to 97% confidence limits that left wing       conspirators see right wing conspiracies everywhere"              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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