I know that SSds need power to retain their data over long periods of time but was wondering what the retention period usually is on average for a few different scenarios, such as:
1.) When it comes to internal SSDs in laptops and desktops, do these computers generally feed power to the SSD to retain data even when the PC or laptop is powered off (but still plugged in)?
2.) What about external SSDs or internal SSDs that are not plugged in full time (ie. used in a USB HDD dock). How long can these retain data without power?
I'm thinking of using a larger SSD for cloud syncing in a computer that may not be turned on all the time (maybe once per week or at least once per month. Now I figure once per month is probably enough to maintain the data on the SSD but wanted to be sure. I know that using SSDs for storage -- or long term storage -- is not a good idea, and that's not exactly what I'm doing here -- it's only for syncing to the cloud as I have everything else backed up on regular HDDs. I only am going to use the SSD because I need a 2.5" drive and the largest HDD I see in that size is only 2TB. So it looks like SSDs are the only option in this case for this use, short of going to an enterprise-level 2.5" HDD.)
1.) When it comes to internal SSDs in laptops and desktops, do these computers generally feed power to the SSD to retain data even when the PC or laptop is powered off (but still plugged in)?
2.) What about external SSDs or internal SSDs that are not plugged in full time (ie. used in a USB HDD dock). How long can these retain data without power?
I'm thinking of using a larger SSD for cloud syncing in a computer that may not be turned on all the time (maybe once per week or at least once per month. Now I figure once per month is probably enough to maintain the data on the SSD but wanted to be sure. I know that using SSDs for storage -- or long term storage -- is not a good idea, and that's not exactly what I'm doing here -- it's only for syncing to the cloud as I have everything else backed up on regular HDDs. I only am going to use the SSD because I need a 2.5" drive and the largest HDD I see in that size is only 2TB. So it looks like SSDs are the only option in this case for this use, short of going to an enterprise-level 2.5" HDD.)