UnknownDZN :
Thank You so so much. So what do the ssd Really do
An SSD comes with many advantages.
- Less power draw
- Faster boot times
- Faster software loading times
- Faster data transfer (up to 30%+ opening files)
- May marginally improve game performance, may not (usually not though) - although TweakTown suggests otherwise
- Faster game loading times
- No moving parts within the component, meaning a longer life if used correctly and less heat generated, and quieter
- Larger size SSDs tend to be slightly quicker than smaller ones also, due to the number of NAND chips available.
There are lots of advantages to having an SSD, they have come a long way and gives your whole system a boost. It won't necessarily improve areas like gaming FPS (unless your -rarely- storage is your bottleneck, in which case it will be faster than a HDD), but will improve load and data transfer times as well as draw less power, and generate less heat.
Most people (myself included) go for a SSD with OS and core programmes & HDD set up for everything else. So don't rush to throwing away all HDD straight away. You don't need an SSD for basic storage. But that's up to you, on whether you think the price hike is worth the data transfer improvement, as HDD is still better value per GB (for obvious reasons).