PC Pro

VIEW FROM THE L ABS

Solid-state drives are now a stable, mature technology, but that doesn’t mean progress will slow to a halt

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It doesn’t seem long ago that solid-state storage was an exciting new technology. I remember the buzz when Intel’s first SSD, the X25-M, arrived in the Labs. It had a capacity of 80GB – which even at the time felt pretty tight – and cost an eyewaterin­g £440. It was slow by modern standards, with a maximum read speed of 226MB/sec over the thencurren­t SATA II interface. Even so, in a world of mechanical drives, it felt like the future.

Today, SSDs have practicall­y become a commodity. On the SATA side, performanc­e is more or less uniform across the board, and even budget drives offer more longevity than any normal person is likely to ever need.

That’s not to say the manufactur­ers are going to sit back and relax. In the newish world of M.2, there’s plenty of scope for speeds to climb and prices to fall. There’s a big gap between this month’s fastest and slowest NVMe drives, and even the mighty Samsung 960 Pro isn’t yet capable of saturating the interface.

Even so, if you’re wondering whether you should hold out for the next generation of NVMe drives, I would suggest that it’s probably not worth the wait.

To see why, take a look at our Adobe Photoshop, After Effects and Microsoft Excel benchmark results opposite. The advantage of a solidstate drive over the mechanical Seagate Barracuda drive is easy to see – but, beyond that, the difference between a cheap SATA drive and a lightning-quick M.2 model is remarkably modest.

That tallies with what we’ve observed many times in our own applicatio­n benchmarks. Faster read and write performanc­e is great for specific tasks, but has little effect on everyday productivi­ty. Often, the benefit of solid-state storage isn’t about transfer speeds but latency.

Still, if the history of home computing teaches us anything, it’s that more powerful hardware breeds more demanding software. As superfast SSDs become more and more common, I don’t doubt that developers will increasing­ly find ways to exploit them – for example, by relying more on disk caching to free up valuable system RAM. Choosing a faster drive may bring limited benefits today, but it will ensure that you’re well-equipped for whatever the future brings.

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 ??  ?? Darien Graham-Smith is associate editor of PC Pro and promises to be a better backeruppe­r. Email him at darien@pcpro.co.uk
Darien Graham-Smith is associate editor of PC Pro and promises to be a better backeruppe­r. Email him at darien@pcpro.co.uk

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