![]() ![]() I only use consumer SATA SSDs for things that are mostly read-only such as game installs. The situation with screwed up firmware is bad enough in HD land, no need to pile additional complexity on top. I'd avoid hybrid drives for software reasons. They are reasonably predictable, however, and you can deal with them. I know it's expensive but a fully fledged SSD is the way to go if you expect leaps and bounds of performance improvements.Harddrive wise, Hitachi is now WD (which means it won't take long for the firmware to stink) and Fujitsu is Toshiba. Eliminate the need to uninstall games in order to make. Enjoy up to 2TB of space on 2.5- and 3.5-inch HDDs. Perfect for gamers and creative professionals who want it all, now. With up to 2TB of storage, FireCuda makes deleting games and filesto free up disk spacea thing of the past. It could arguably be worse since there is the SSD/disc controller now in the data path. Games are getting better and videos are getting sharper. ![]() Most of the audio (if not all) in a DAW would end up o the rotational disc so there would be no benefit, since disc access time and bandwidth are the overwhelming limiting factors for DAWs. A hybrid drive has only a small amount of SSD space. I generally stick with Hitachi or Fujitsu and have had no issues ever (touch wood!). Personally, I avoid Seagate completely due to their reliability being poor compared to Hitachi and Fujitsu. ![]()
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