But I do not believe you can just switch back and forth as you choose which OS to boot into.Yesss, finally ! THANKYOU VERY MUCH
While you can use Optane in one of the 2 M.2 storage ports, IMO it is not very useful as it is only a cache and really is not nearly as useful as just getting another M.2 SSD.Is the following setup possible? I want to use a WD Black SN750 250 GB NVME SSD on one M.2 slot. The other M.2 slot will have an Optane Memory 16GB. And a SATA 1 TB WD blue HDD. Motherboard is ASUS PRIME Z390 - P
OH but when I boot to either the nvme ssd or the WD hdd, do I have to designate which drive the optane memory should boost? Because the nvme ssd itself is fast enough already. I don't need any further boostWhile you can use Optane in one of the 2 M.2 storage ports, IMO it is not very useful as it is only a cache and really is not nearly as useful as just getting another M.2 SSD.
You have to use the Intel RAID drivers to set it up. It's useless for the NVMe drive and really provides no speed improvement for HDDs, which is why SSHDs never took off. It would be much better to either just save the port for future use or if you want it now add another NVMe stick.OH but when I boot to either the nvme ssd or the WD hdd, do I have to designate which drive the optane memory should boost? Because the nvme ssd itself is fast enough already. I don't need any further boost
So when I boot to either NVME ssd or the WD hdd, the optane memory will boost the OS drive in use? Because nvme ssd is for work, and WD hdd is for gamesYou have to use the Intel RAID drivers to set it up. It's useless for the NVMe drive and really provides no speed improvement for HDDs, which is why SSHDs never took off. It would be much better to either just save the port for future use or if you want it now add another NVMe stick.
Moreover, you can create a cache up to 64GB with an NVMe stick for use with the HDD anyway, which again I do not recommend since you get little in the way of a performance increase.
But its pretty common. A lot of laptops are supporting it. I guess people must like it?Optane modules are a solution in search of a problem.
That is a waste of an M.2 port.
Oh, you have an OS on each?So when I boot to either NVME ssd or the WD hdd, the optane memory will boost the OS drive in use? Because nvme ssd is for work, and WD hdd is for games
No, it is a marketing thing.But its pretty common. A lot of laptops are supporting it. I guess people must like it?
^THIS. 100% total agreement. Marketing thing that is a waste of money (Optane cache).No, it is a marketing thing.
I've seen laptops advertised as having a 16GB Optane and an NVMe drive. Worse than useless (except in sales numbers)
Yesss, finally ! THANKYOU VERY MUCHOh, you have an OS on each?
(if two identical Win 10, that is actually a bad idea)
That Optane can only work with ONE drive. Designated in the BIOS.
But I do not believe you can just switch back and forth as you choose which OS to boot into.Yesss, finally ! THANKYOU VERY MUCH
Ohhh...what an anti-climax...so forgo this setup?But I do not believe you can just switch back and forth as you choose which OS to boot into.
It gets set up as a pseudoRAID with one drive. Can't just switch back and forth.Ohhh...what an anti-climax...so forgo this setup?
Oh I see. So...no point in considering optane memory at all ?It gets set up as a pseudoRAID with one drive. Can't just switch back and forth.
I would absolutely not consider an Optane module for this.
For some rare (corporate) uses, it can be beneficial.
For instance, a database server. Needs to hold LOTS of data (HDD), but needs a limited small space of fast access for a tiny amount of data....the stored procedures and queries.
There, the stored proc runs fast, and requests the desired data from the spinning drive.
For a consumer system? Not even a little bit. Waste of an M.2 port.
I wouldn't.Oh I see. So...no point in considering optane memory at all ?
Thankyou very much for your insights.I wouldn't.
I'm in the process of working up a new build for early next year, and Optane is not even on the radar.
Remember this...just because a thing exists, does not mean it is usable in all use cases.Thankyou very much for your insights.