bryan Posted December 8, 2015 Report Share Posted December 8, 2015 What say you? http://www.instructables.com/id/Extra-Ram-Using-a-Thumb-Drive/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Firemonkey Posted December 9, 2015 Report Share Posted December 9, 2015 Here is an interesting comparison of the relative speed of things inside a computer, scaled to seconds, minutes, and days rather than nanoseconds. The takeaway - If you need ram...it's better to get some real ram. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bryan Posted December 9, 2015 Author Report Share Posted December 9, 2015 Here is an interesting comparison of the relative speed of things inside a computer, scaled to seconds, minutes, and days rather than nanoseconds. The takeaway - If you need ram...it's better to get some real ram. image.png Does this mean Thumd Drive is bad idea?? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Firemonkey Posted December 9, 2015 Report Share Posted December 9, 2015 It means it's more novelty than a solution. Considering the chart above, when the computer works from the flash drive, it's taking about a week (scaled time measure) to do so. Compare that with actual ram which can be accessed in a couple of minutes (again, scaled). I guess if your grinding on a swap file on magnetic disk, flash looks like a 4 fold increase. But ram is affordable, so why not go from 5 days down to 5 seconds? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bryan Posted December 9, 2015 Author Report Share Posted December 9, 2015 Thanks for the info and advice. Will go reg RAM. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DennisLinkletter Posted December 9, 2015 Report Share Posted December 9, 2015 Great... love that chart! Once you work with/on a SSD you can never go back.. but keep them well backed up because when they go/crash there is no possibility of recovery. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gnomatic Posted December 9, 2015 Report Share Posted December 9, 2015 Great... love that chart! Once you work with/on a SSD you can never go back.. but keep them well backed up because when they go/crash there is no possibility of recovery. You are right Dennis. Replacing a traditional hard drive with and SSD should be upgrade priority #1 for just about anyone not already running their system off an SSD. As you said, once you experience your computer running off an SSD, you'll never want to go back to a regular hard drive. This can't be emphasized enough. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...