• Gladaed@feddit.org
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    4 hours ago

    If you need SATA SSDs you are not a home user.

    Just use a HDD for your bulk needs and a SSD m2.

    • Limonene@lemmy.world
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      59 minutes ago

      Three years ago, I replaced a failing SATA SSD in my personal laptop with a new SATA SSD. That laptop had plenty of power, and I’d still be using it today if the keyboard still worked, and the screen hinges weren’t cracked. It had no NVME slots.

    • Frenchgeek@lemmy.ml
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      4 hours ago

      A SATA SSD is a good way to speed up an aging machine, one without M2 slot. But glad to know I qualify as a professional user.

      • DFX4509B@lemmy.wtf
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        3 hours ago

        You could still stick an NVMe drive on an older system as a secondary drive, eg. as a /home drive if you’re running Linux on it, by sticking it on a riser card, although you’d still need to boot off a SATA drive, and you’d take up one of your expansion slots doing that.

        • Frenchgeek@lemmy.ml
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          4 hours ago

          And those machines are still good enough to browse the web, or for text processing. I usually set them up with a small SSD for booting fast and a large HDD for the /home folder. Hell I keep a D410PT around for the times I need an absolutely silent machine (Well, as soon as I buy a picoATX for it, it will be. Too bad I missed the computer-2 case).

        • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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          41 minutes ago

          Jellyfin media server. I have another one acting as my router (with a small managed switch and openWRT) and one more pi5 i am using as a retro console. That one uses 2 nvme m.2 drives but the pi4 doesnt support nvme, only sata.