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| Using a solid state drive instead of normal hard drive in cab |
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| foomench:
I bought a solid state drive for a client HTPC on eBay - 1GB for $80. That might be an option for some people. It wouldn't work for an arcade cabinet for me though - for various reasons I want XP, and I don't think that will fit. Another similar option is a Compact Flash to IDE adapter. CF is getting cheaper and capacities are going up. -foomench |
| Witchboard:
We had a member who was working on a cabinet with this option. Here's the thread. |
| PixelCloud:
There are ram solid state drives which are VERY expensive but super fast.. ithey are basically a circut board with a load of ram sticks in them ... Edit by moderator: Do not try to get around the auto-censor. What you have to say involves profanity, it's not worth saying! |
| AlanS17:
I've heard that flash memory has only a limited amount a read/write cycles before they go byebye. The only practical way to use them (at least for an indefinite amount of time) would be to make a RAM drive at start-up and then to load the contents of the flash memory into RAM every time you start the computer. They make a version of Win98 that fits on like 100MB, and that seems to be a popular option used in conjunction with flash drives. Otherwise you may wake up one day to an "Incredible Disposable Arcade Machine". |
| foomench:
There are a number of options of getting around the read/write cycles thing. You can make your boot partition read-only. The real issue is the swap space which involves lots of reading and writing. I've heard of some people setting that up on a network drive. I think most of these are pretty easy to do with Linux, but may be more difficult with Windows. -foomench |
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