A Solid State Boot Drive

Originally I setup the machine using one of Western Digital's 1TB green drives as the boot drive, but in the quest for lower power and a quieter PC I tried making the boot drive a SSD.

Supertalent makes a line of 3.5" SSDs for desktops, I tried the 64GB model:

Obviously it's silent and it does consume less power, but I wanted to know how much so I ran a few tests, the two systems are identical the only difference being the drive used:

  Idle Power H.264 Decode Power
Supertalent 64GB SSD 53W 66W
Western Digital 1TB Green HDD 58W 71W

 

Compared to the WD 1TB drive, the 64GB SSD managed to shave around 5W from both idle and active power consumption.

  Supertalent 64GB SSD Western Digital 1TB Green HDD
Boot Time 44.1 seconds 66.8 seconds
PCMark Vantage Score 3359 3188
Windows Defender 30.2 MB/s 15.7 MB/s
Gaming 39.0 MB/s 11.2 MB/s
Windows Photo Gallery 50.0 MB/s 35.9 MB/s
Vista Startup 16.1 MB/s 13.7 MB/s
Windows Movie Maker 8.4 MB/s 27.4 MB/s
Windows Media Center 16.4 MB/s 43.1 MB/s
Windows Media Player 4.8 MB/s 6.7 MB/s
Application Loading 5.7 MB/s 3.5 MB/s

 

Boot time was also significantly reduced, and most application-centric benchmarks improved in performance.

Pricing on SSDs is still quite high so for the most part it doesn't make economical sense, however in the quest for lower system power it can be effective.

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  • JarredWalton - Friday, May 2, 2008 - link

    Or rather than ripping at full bitrate, you could reencode to something smaller, so you can get 5-10GB per movie and still have a good quality 1080P output. AutoMKV is the new tool for stuff like that.
  • legoman666 - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    I rip all of my movies to h264 + ac3 in a mkv container. Just because you illegally download movies in mkv format does not mean that everyone else does also.
  • kevon27 - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    I only do bluray... DVD's are for the peasants. I not going to subject myself to that low quality bit torrent stuff you commoners are use to.
    Pip-pip!
  • Locutus465 - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    You know, you can rip bluray, bluray rips are also available online.... In fact I think anand specificall discussed ripping "high deffinition content" in mkv format... what do you think he means?
  • Locutus465 - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    Ok, so how does that iPhone web interface work? I was thinking of developing somethign for PPC that would allow roughly the same kind of access, but I guess if there's stuff in the works I'll just check that out.
  • crimson117 - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    It's just a web interface that happens to work in the iPhone browser. You could also access it from a laptop or desktop on your network.

    I'd love to see a developer come up with a native iPhone app for controlling media setups, though I expect there'd need to be some special software running on your media pc.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    Exactly, the options are two-fold:

    1) Develop an iPhone optimized website (ala digg.com/iphone or iphone.facebook.com), or
    2) Create an iPhone application that triggers web services running on the HTPC itself.

    With the SDK due out this summer, I'm hoping the latter will be a possibility.
  • Locutus465 - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    Perhaps I'll see what can be done on PPC and put it out there then so non-GSM/apple folks can enjoy that kind of fun ;)
  • cghebert - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    Anand,

    sweet setup! Will you guys be doing any of your HTPC stuff with windows xp for those of us who haven't yet "upgraded" to Vista?

  • allengambrell - Thursday, May 1, 2008 - link

    Check out myTV plugin for media center for managing your tv shows. It works much better the video brower or mymovies because it uses a full database and downloads all the episode and show information from the web. I use it to manage all my recorded and downloaded shows.

    Also are you going to install a ATSC tuner? This is one of the best things about media center. I have dish too but the offair recoreded shows look much better on media center than on dish.

    If I were you I would move the storage for the dvds and media to a fileserver dedicated for this purpose. You can then not have to worry so much about noise because you can hide it away from the rest of the rack. I run a gigabit network and have no problem playing recored HD shows or ripped dvds on 3 differant computers at a time. The only storage I have in my media center pcs is for recording show off the offair antenna. This is only because some nights I am recording up to 3 hd shows at a time and I am afraid that that and the playback may be a little to much for the network to handle.

    Also myMovies and myTV both work great in a client/server setup you can put the database servers on the media server and then any changes you make on one computer will be reflected on all.

    I have also tested a htpc with the same chipset that you are using and to me it seems to be really slow compared to my other intel/nvidia based htpc. It even has some trouble decoding recoreded hd shows fast enough to not to get skips and audio sync issues. I would stay away from it.

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