Juim said:
A: is it worth it?. Will there be a performance difference in boot/load times?
No. The performance in theory is fantastic ... but there's a bit of an issue when you talk about how Windows treats the disc. It's unhealthy for flash memory, as a result latency actually grows over time ... and there's no such thing as "defragmentation" for it. My understanding is that hardware manufacturers are using new techniques to offset this drop off in performance ... but even if it yields same performance over time as a HDD, it's still not worth it. (And to note, it doesn't)
Juim said:
B: If it is worth it, which drives should I look at?. And maybe an install tip or two about proper partitioning etc.
I imagine I will have to move most of my other programs to the 1TB SATA drive considering the amount of space I'll be losing with the SSID.
If it worked ... partitioning wouldn't really matter. You could partition it however you wanted.
Juim said:
C: If it isn't worth it, how about a healthy alternative? (Maybe a 10,000 rpm raptor drive or something?).
Any info would be well appreciated.
Frankly, you should go for data redundancy with some good sized drives. Speed, isn't really a big deal when it comes to the disc. You're not going to see revolutionary speed differences between 10K RPM disc and a brand new SSD and such.
What you want to focus on, is caches. They're the biggest bang for your buck ... I mean, if you don't even HAVE to look at the disc that'll be faster than anything else. There's some pretty recent "green" drives, which spin lower, but have enormous cache sizes, that could be worth a look.
Also, For $500 you could build an entire HDD Raid Array ... instead of a single SSD drive, so it's REALLY not worth the money. Those are also handy because of data redundancy. Even if a drive dies, your data will be around still and you don't even have to turn the system off to swap it out. I don't think it's so smooth running Windows, but it works everywhere else.
You could also, if you're not that hardcore ... just get some new drive(s) for internally and a couple for externally. You can build a network HDD storage array, for example, those are very handy for backing up information (or imaging the entire partition)
To be honest, the biggest failure possibility in a standard HDD is the motor dying. It's very unlikely that the heads are going to land on the disc. If they do, then it's a manufacturing defect and covered under warranty. Such as, faulty parts or contaminated air.
The main issue with SSD, again, is not the technology behind it. You know, transistor based memory is FAR more reliable than magnetic polarization and mechanical motors ... HOWEVER, there's a fundamental SOFTWARE problem with the interface on the drives. If they didn't run through a SATA interface and if Operating Systems like Windows didn't treat it just like a HDD writing entire "cylinders" at a time, it would be totally worth it. As it stands, it's got some nonsense software compatibility just to make it "work" not be optimized (this would require them to write an entirely new file system, I believe) and as a result, the performance drops like a rock until eventually (within a year usually) the performance on the SSD is WORSE than on your standard HDD. Like I said, a lot of manufacturers are putting in measures so that the drives can perform better for longer ... but ... it still doesn't eliminate the issue ... and considering just how much more the things cost ... it's simply not worth it.
Just consider that a 2TB drive with a huge cache and lower RPM (performance will be on par with a 7200RPM drive) with a 3-5 year warranty ... is only about $100USD. You could get 5 for the same price have a 4 TB redundancy raid array AND a 2TB external drive (you'd have to buy an enclosure, which is how you should do it) for mobile large storage (or network storage) ... does that seem worth more than a single 250GB SSD drive?
Example Even Warranty extension for a year is only $10 (worth it!)
Blame it on Microsoft, God does.