Conversation

Raccoon🇺🇸🏳️‍🌈

Edited 1 month ago

Random thought...

I feel like a could be worth the investment, just for the (be it and its Libraries/Swap or ) and other main-load programs like and (or another ), but the cheapest ones are nearly $200 and they're all at least 1TB... I wonder if we will see cheaper quarter-TB ones in the next couple years, because that feels like it'd be a good way to utilize the PCIe5 NVME slot in my fancy motherboard...

...or I could be wrong: it has been pointed out that PCIe5 drive speeds are mainly only useful for sequential reads, as lookup times create latency comparable to PCIe4, and that makes up the majority of read-time for smaller files. Maybe that can be improved? Maybe Linux distros will implement something that makes core libs load as big blocks? Or we'll have a way to speed up common lookups on the side?

If possible, it'd be good for keeping current-gen relevant over the next decade.

1
0
0

@Raccoon probably not worth it. load times even on decade old nvme is plenty fast and quarter tb ssds are really fucking expensive compared to larger ones

2
0
0

@charlotte
Yeah, and gen4 NVMe drives are plenty cheap at this point (I bought one for the new computer shortly after I built it), but I wonder what the situation will be when NVMe 5 is fully mature and NVMe 6 becomes mainstream...

1
0
0

@Raccoon like for reference, loading all 30GB or so of my linux install into memory will probably take around 10-20s on my samsung 980 pro

assuming no cpu overhead like disk compression or encryption

0
0
0

@Raccoon i don’t think it is worthwhile to upgade unless you actually benefit from the enhanced theoretical throughput

0
0
0