![]() We already know Windows 10 comes to a grinding halt, even on a system with 4GB of RAM. And in terms of RAM, you can run Tiny10 on a 32-bit system with just 1GB of RAM, and on a 64-bit system, you can make do with 2GB of RAM, which is nothing short of amazing. On 64-bit systems, Tiny10 takes up to 10GB of disk space. To reduce the installation size by 17GB is just great. A vanilla Windows 10 system takes up to 22GB of space. This is an excellent result.For example, if you install Tiny10 on a 32-bit system, it only takes 5.2GB of disk space, which is a breakthrough. Both SSDs had virtually similar results with HDD6 exceeding 2GB/s six others above 1GB/s and HDD7 just below the 1GB/s mark. This may be a dated benchmark but we hardly ever see any of its tests exceed 2GB/s, but for RAID drive testing. Media Center which can handle video recording, time shifting and streaming from Windows media center to an extender such as XBox.Home Video editing with Movie Maker which can be very time consuming.Importing digital photos into Windows Photo Gallery.Streaming Data from storage in games such as Alan Wake which allows for massive worlds and riveting non-stop action.There are eight tests in all and the tests performed to record the speed of data movement in MB/s to which they are then given a numerical score after all of the tests are complete. The SSD Review uses benchmark software called PCMark Vantage 圆4 HDD Suite to create testing scenarios that might be used in the typical user experience. ![]() When comparing the two SSDs, WD black came in with a total score of 16624 where the SanDisk Extreme pro resulted in 16348. Performance is decent with respect to Anvil, however, we would have like to see read IOPS just a bit higher. Not only does it have a preset SSD benchmark, but also, it has included such things as endurance testing and threaded I/O read, write and mixed tests, all of which are very simple to understand and use in our benchmark testing. The benchmark displays test results for, not only throughput but also, IOPS and Disk Access Times. Performance remained very high, considering this benchmark is famous for knocking it down significantly in most cases, and our Copy Benchmark displayed some great data transfer resultsĪnvil’s Storage Utilities (ASU) is the most complete test bed available for the solid state drive today. We didn’t quite reach listed specs of 500K read and 400k write IOPS but there is nothing wrong with this result whatsoever. Transfer speeds are displayed on the left with IOPS results on the right. For the most part, AS SSD tests can be considered the ‘worst case scenario’ in obtaining data transfer speeds and many enthusiasts like AS SSD for their needs. ![]() The toughest benchmark available for solid state drives is AS SSD as it relies solely on incompressible data samples when testing performance. Not here though, this is an incredible Crystal DiskMark score. ![]() This Crystal DiskMark result is from the SanDisk Extreme Pro and…at least typically… we might see performance drop a bit in comparing ATTO Disk Benchmark and Crystal DiskMark. ![]() Performance is virtually identical, regardless of data sample so we have included only that using random data samples. Crystal Disk Benchmark is used to measure read and write performance through sampling of random data which is, for the most part, incompressible. ![]()
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