OCZ Intros Indilinx Everest 2-based Agility 4 Series SSDs

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Scour

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Mar 11, 2012
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I will take a look at the Vertex 4 in future, the 5-year-warranty is rare. And if they use Intel-chips it´s maybe a option. And it´s nice that it don´t use the SF-controllers.

But I´m not that user who daily writes 100GB of data and my actual (lol) PC only have SATA 2, so I probably don´t see the difference to the M4. So I wait for a better price ;)

What was your prob with Octane (S2?)? It´s not the fastest, I know, but did u have reliabilty-probs or compatibilty-issues?
 
[citation][nom]Scour[/nom]I will take a look at the Vertex 4 in future, the 5-year-warranty is rare. And if they use Intel-chips it´s maybe a option. And it´s nice that it don´t use the SF-controllers.But I´m not that user who daily writes 100GB of data and my actual (lol) PC only have SATA 2, so I probably don´t see the difference to the M4. So I wait for a better price What was your prob with Octane (S2?)? It´s not the fastest, I know, but did u have reliabilty-probs or compatibilty-issues?[/citation]

Octane did not like writing and reading in its usual speeds when I filled it up like Vertex 4 did. I had to wipe it to get it to full speed again.
 

girlstoms123

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About four years later, the Soviet Union was granted access to Cam Ranh Bay. It upgraded the war-torn facilities, adding runways, dry docks, shelters for submarines, weapons-storage facilities and signals intelligence stations, according to a history of the port by Ian Storey and Carlyle Thayer, “Cam Ranh Bay: Past imperfect, Future Conditional,” published in 2001 by the journal Contemporary Southeast Asia.
 

alphaalphaalpha

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[citation][nom]girlstoms123[/nom]About four years later, the Soviet Union was granted access to Cam Ranh Bay. It upgraded the war-torn facilities, adding runways, dry docks, shelters for submarines, weapons-storage facilities and signals intelligence stations, according to a history of the port by Ian Storey and Carlyle Thayer, “Cam Ranh Bay: Past imperfect, Future Conditional,” published in 2001 by the journal Contemporary Southeast Asia.[/citation]

As interesting as history is, is there a reason for this little piece being posted to Tom's? Normally, I'd assume that this is spam, but there is no hidden link or anything like that that I can see in the post, so I have no idea why it was posted... Is this some kind of weird trolling?
 
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