Page 2 of 4

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Fri Dec 11, 2009 19:10
by Godzil

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Fri Dec 11, 2009 19:13
by gradek
Godzil, 20-30fps is not hair on fire speeds, but I see you are switching decks while this is happening. what was your performance like before with an Intel SSD and are you running the SSD internal or external?

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Fri Dec 11, 2009 19:27
by Godzil
Internal system disk. Win 7. About 200 clips at every deck, all of them rendered with DXV codec.
20-30 fps it's only during decks switching. Before that, with WD 5400 rpm HDD, it was 3-5 fps for few minuets.

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 20:54
by gradek
@Godzil,

Thanks for sharing your experiences. I just did a really simple test comparing my internal SSD and External 7200 HD. http://ww.resolume.com/forum/viewtopic. ... 466#p23466

I didn't notice much difference when switching to a deck with about 30 clips on the External vs. a deck with 30 clips on my Internal SSD. But the playback speed difference was better with the SSD.

The performance of deck switching seems to have been resolved in the new 3.1.3 update. what version did you do your test on?

----

@low-res

there is some talk about install SSD on External drives via eSATA going on here. other people are having some performance issues: http://ww.resolume.com/forum/viewtopic. ... 466#p23446

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Sun Dec 20, 2009 12:02
by lo-res
Thanks for the info Gradek. Have managed to install the external SSD but have not noticed a massive improvement in playback. I'm planning to do a "live" partition on my hard drive but am seeking advice on the best way to do this without wiping my entire hard drive. Will let you know the results when I've completed the task.

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 09:27
by Godzil
gradek wrote:@Godzil,
The performance of deck switching seems to have been resolved in the new 3.1.3 update. what version did you do your test on?
On video is 3.1.1. SSD and 3.1.3 are beaten combination ;)

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Mon Dec 21, 2009 22:42
by gradek
@low-res

I just did the same thing with my Internal SSD drive. I made a 38gb partition for clips to use during a live set. With OSX it is really easy to do. you can use the built in disk utility to split the partition. Remember to backup your data, because sometimes there can be issues or errors when partitioning. the best way is to launch disk utility from the install DVD and do it that way. partition a drive that is running your OS can be tricky/dangerous. for the PC I used to use a program called partition magic that lets you partition a drive without deleting data, or reformatting. again, backup first.

having a partition is a good idea. that way if you ever want to move the files to another drive internal or external you just copy the disk image. all your decks will still be linked in resolume. If you just move the files to a new drive, resolume will not fine them in their new location. this might be a bit different on mac and pc since resolume might look at drive letter instead of drive name when running on windows. but i'm not sure.

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Tue Dec 22, 2009 09:22
by lo-res
Thanks Gradek, I'll get on it ASAP. :)

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Thu Jun 10, 2010 06:15
by VJsynC
well, since i really really had to buy an ssd drive, can you guys suggest me the best external drive with the best quality/price relation? 100 / 128 GB, that could work well with resolume?

Thanks,
Sync.

Re: Buy an SSD hard drive and VJ with your hair on fire!

Posted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 02:23
by francoe
bart wrote: This degradation of SSD drives is solved with TRIM, info here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRIM_(SSD_command)
Exactly, TRIM solves the speed degradation over time. A real smart implementation by the way.
But following the 'theory', SSD drives seems to have a small timelife (if you make a heavy use).
If I'm not wrong, you have only a millon writes/deletions per unit.
Have you some knowledge or experience about that?