Ocz Wiper Tool

With the original Vertex all you got was a command line wiper tool to manually TRIM the drive. While Vertex 2 Pro supports Windows 7 TRIM, you also get a nifty little.

The OCZ Toolbox With the original Vertex all you got was a command line wiper tool to manually TRIM the drive. While Vertex 2 Pro supports Windows 7 TRIM, you also get a nifty little toolbox crafted by SandForce and OCZ: The coolest part of the toolbox as far as I’m concerned? Single click Secure Erase from within Windows. I’m not sure how much that helps end users, but it makes my life a lot easier. You also get an indication of flash health, bad blocks, etc. The Vertex is all grown up now.

Adobe Photoshop Cs4 Language Pack. Knut Nystedt O Crux Pdf Editor. Say goodbye to Indilinx. • - Wednesday, January 13, 2010 - Anand, Your SSD benchmarking strategy has a big problem: there are zero real-world-applicable comparison data. IOPS and PCMark are stupid. For video cards do you look at IOPS or FLOPS, or do you look at what matters in the real world: framerate?

As I said in my post here ('>, you need to simply measure time. I think this list is an excellent starting point, for what to measure to compare hard drives: 1.

Ocz Wiper Tool

Time to launch applications _a) Firefox _b) Google Earth _c) Photoshop 3. Time to open huge files _a).doc _b).xls _c).pdf _d).psd 4. Game framerates _a) minimum _b) average 5. Time to copy files to & from the drive _a) 3000 200kB files _b) 200 4MB files _c) 1 2GB file 6. Other application-specific tasks What your current strategy lacks is the element of 'significance'; is the performance difference between drives significant or insignificant?