Better Application Performance? Not Exactly

If battery life didn't improve, surely it must be a sacrifice made in the name of better application performance right? Not exactly.

To understand why, we must first look at the synthetic performance of the drive:

XBench Disk Test (Sequential) MacBook Pro (Hitachi 5400RPM) MacBook Pro (Memoright SSD)
Uncached Writes (4K) 53.5MB/s 61.7MB/s
Uncached Writes (256K) 48.2MB/s 73.0MB/s
Uncached Reads (4K) 11.2MB/s 10.2MB/s
Uncached Reads (256K) 49.8MB/s 68.2MB/s

 

In sequential access, small block reads and writes either don't improve at all or improve by an amount that's not huge (15% for uncached writes, but that's just an improvement in the performance of your disk subsystem - not the entire machine, expect real world performance improvements to be some fraction of that). Larger accesses are a bit more favorable, with reads and writes improving by 37% and 51% respectively.

Most single-application desktop usage models are actually very heavy on sequential disk access, and in these situations you won't see the biggest performance benefits from a SSD - even something as fast as the Memoright.

Looking at the random reads however tells another story:

XBench Disk Test (Random Access) MacBook Pro (Hitachi 5400RPM) MacBook Pro (Memoright SSD)
Uncached Writes (4K) 0.92MB/s 1.11MB/s
Uncached Writes (256K) 22.4MB/s 27.9MB/s
Uncached Reads (4K) 0.47MB/s 9.98MB/s
Uncached Reads (256K) 19.5MB/s 79.1MB/s

 

While random writes offer a ~20% performance improvement, random reads range from 3x - 20x the speed of a mechanical disk. Now since most single-application usage patterns tend to be sequential in nature, we don't see these incredible performance gains in many of our scripted tests - however, in actual usage you can easily feel a bigger difference.

This is where the whole: once you go SSD, it hurts to go back statement from the introduction of this article comes from. Within a single application, performance may not improve a ton, but your day to day usage experience will be a lot smoother.

Let's take a look at some of those application tests:

Application Tests in Seconds (Lower is Better) MacBook Pro (Hitachi 5400RPM) MacBook Pro (Memoright SSD)
iPhoto Import 72.1 seconds 62.2 seconds
iPhoto Export to Web 116 seconds 119 seconds
Pages Export to Word 27.4 seconds 26.9 seconds
Keynote Export to PPT 18.3 seconds 16.0 seconds
Word 2008 - Compare Docs 69.0 seconds 62.9 seconds
PowerPoint 2008 + Word 2008 - Compare Docs & Print to PDF 82.8 seconds 85.8 seconds
Adobe Photoshop CS3 - Retouch Artists Speed Test 44.6 seconds 42.5 seconds

 

The biggest performance increases here are in the iPhoto Import, Keynote Export and Word Compare Documents tests. Performance went down slightly in the iPhoto Export and PowerPoint tests, but the drops were so small that they can be considered insignificant.

The major take-home point here is that performance didn't go up all that much in most of these tests, with the biggest gain being just under 14% that's a marginal improvement given the nearly $4,000 price of admission.

But there is just one more thing...

Better Battery Life? Not Necessarily A Snappier System? Absolutely
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  • ZeglaTech - Tuesday, October 27, 2009 - link

    Did you get to keep the SSD and the Macbook Pro?

    Lucky you!
  • Slaanesh - Friday, April 25, 2008 - link

    It takes 19 secs on a default McBook pro to launch MS Word???????
  • Loknar - Wednesday, April 30, 2008 - link

    no it doesnt; and its a lot faster for me to boot too (using same 2.5GHz one). Please check your benchmark Anand! I think this benchmark is a good comparison with HD-SSD but the figures should not be taken separately.
  • CyniCat - Friday, April 25, 2008 - link

    I'm hoping that there will still be moving parts in my next laptop (and I don't just mean the screen hinges!) - I have tried, and detest, keyboards without moving parts.
  • gochichi - Tuesday, April 22, 2008 - link

    The Civic comment was NOT about buying a $15,000 Honda Civic and enjoying the reliability and high resale value.

    The Civic comment was about tricking it out for another $25,000.00 and then in the end having nothing more than a tricked out Civic that "sane people laugh at".

    It's a very good example. Very good. Really good. :)

    It's entirely true though fellas... MacBook Pro for $2k... OK, maybe, I mean it's a really nice computer and people will buy it off of you for years to come. But a $4,000 HDD for a $2k MB pro... never, not ever, not even a little bit.

    These drives will be a dime a dozen. Why? Because masses will not pay extra and yet they will become cheaper to make than the mechanical based drives. I think it could be a $100- $250 option for a while for the nerds. It's similar to LCD vs CRTs... CRTs are less desirable AND cost more to make... so now we have LCDs that are not only bigger than CRTs they are also less expensive. 24" Sony CRT was like $1,600.00 originally.
  • Loknar - Monday, April 21, 2008 - link

    I have a MacBook that cost less than 3000$ (2.5GHz) and the load times are 15-25% faster than yours. Yes, I make sure the app is not running already. Example; CS3 loads in less than 10 seconds and the boot time is faster too. Any explanation?
  • wired00 - Friday, April 18, 2008 - link

    i believe the reason the battery is the same is that the LCD is the main draw on power NOT the HDD. wouldn't this be obvious?

    I've read about replacing an IPOD hdd of a 3g, 4g, 5g or 6g video with a 32gb or 64gb CF flash card by using a simple adapter and it can increase the battery life by 40%+ when playing mp3/lossless this is because the ipod doesn't have the screen on 24/7. BUT if you try comparing battery life when playing video it will be almost exactly the same...obviously because the LCD is drawing far more than any moving hdd replaced with SS can improve.

    here's info on the ipod mod if your interested...
    http://www.tarkan.info/20080115/tutorials/iflash-i...">http://www.tarkan.info/20080115/tutorials/iflash-i...
  • mindless1 - Friday, April 18, 2008 - link

    Yes a drive is a lesser consumer of power in a laptop, but the generic controller, bridge, and cache also use some power. In other flash devices we discount the use of power by supportive silicon on the mainboard and only count flash chips themselves and a minimal controller bridge.

    On the other hand I think some people overestimate the amount of power a mechanical laptop drive uses, they too have been optimized for low power as much as reasonably possible. It doesn't take a lot of power to keep a tiny low mass precision bearing and platter spinning once it is. Think about a toy, top. You put a lot of energy into starting it but frictional forces that slow it down could be overcome with minimal addt'l energy investment. Seeking is still a factor but a low mass arm is used. In the end we have the same choices as always, keep optmizing hardware towards increased performance or lower power usage and most people pick the former not the latter so that's the design target for most equipment unless there is another pressing need. High density blade like server needs come to mind, but $4000 a pop is a lot of money even for that.
  • zshift - Wednesday, April 16, 2008 - link

    hm, i could either upgrade every other component in the computer and get AMAZING application performance, or i could pay MORE to have the aplication load 10-20s (MAX) faster...
  • Lorne - Wednesday, April 16, 2008 - link

    I would have liked to see the desktop PC statistics with the newer SSD side by side with the Hitachi, Mainly to see if the Macbook is the limiting factor in some way to both the drives.

    Reason being Ive seen alot better performance from other SSD's at a third of the cost.

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