اشتعلت مقالا عن Hack7MC عيني بضعة أشهر مضت, لكنني فقط فقط حصلت على جميع أنحاء لمتابعة ذلك. والفكرة هي لتسريع متصفح وسائل الإعلام المساعد للإعلام مركز عن طريق نقل مكتبته إلى رخيصة USB أقراص, والتي من المؤمل يقدم أداء أفضل بكثير من محركات الأقراص الصلبة العادية. The first thing I did was test a couple of flash-based devices that I have against my desktop HardDrive…
WD VelociRaptor (300Gig)
random 4k read = 0.9mb/s
random 512k read = 57mb/s
Super Talent Pico‑C 8Gig
random 4k read = 8.2mb/s
random 512kb read = 34.6mb/s
SanDisk Extreme III SDHC 8Gig
random 4k read = 4.6mb/s
random 512kb read = 20.45mb/s
–update
Corsair Flash Voyager 8Gb
random 4k read = 8.13mb/s
random 512kb read = 30.41mb/s
I have been led to understand that the 4k measurements are the most important values, however I would like an explanation of why this is the case.
The average file size in my media browser image library is ~42kb so they are relatively small files, which I believe is relevant
For comparison of a lot more pen drives there is a recent review (2009) في Ars Technica
The corsair drive from the ars review is currently on ebay for around £16 — I wonder how much of a performance increase it offers
–update
- The corsair drive from the ars review turned out to be fractionally slower (effectively on par with) the Pico‑C
- The average files in my Media Browser library are now 610kb. They range from 5kb to 2mb.
- USB 2.0 is theoretically limited to 60mb/s, and in practice seems limited to 30mb/s
- Without USB 3.0, or an internal (e.g. SATA) SSD I am skeptical that any realistic speed-up can be gained with this method. Using an SQL database for Media Browser may offer a substantial speed up, and the database can easily be hosted on a ذاكرة الوصول العشوائي drive for an additional increase
“Hi James I realise it has been a long while, but I just checked this on windows 11 (build 23H2)…”