Michael314 opened this issue on Apr 22, 2010 · 5 posts
Michael314 posted Thu, 22 April 2010 at 4:07 AM
Hello,
I'm setting up a new box for mainly 3D purposes. I also got a 64 GB SSD for it and want to use it in the best possible way to speed up Poser and Carrara.
Often I read about amazing boot times when using a SSD, but IMHO this is a waste,
gaining maybe 10 seconds a few times a day.
I also decided against using it as swap space / paging file, because the new box will have enough RAM.
My runtimes are too big to fit on it completely. Therefore I see the following two options left:
Has anyone used / compared these two options and can post some experience? Or does anyone know a better use for the SSD?
Best regards,
Michael
cspear posted Thu, 22 April 2010 at 10:34 AM
I can't see any real advantages of using an SSD for Poser other than minor speed improvements and as you say, 64Gb is a bit small for big runtimes.
I'd use it as your boot drive: as well as faster boot times, whenever Windows or an application needs to access stuff in the Windows folder (all your system files, drivers, etc. etc.) it will speed things up. If you install Programs to that drive, they'll launch faster too.
I haven't tried using symlinks with my runtimes because, I suspect, that way madness lies!
Windows 10 x64 Pro - Intel Xeon E5450 @ 3.00GHz (x2)
PoserPro 11 - Units: Metres
Adobe CC 2017
Mark@poser posted Sat, 24 April 2010 at 12:51 PM
Michael,
I would certainly be interested in seeing what gains you get if you used the SSD for the temp file location. I use XP with only 2Gb of RAM, and most of my scenes are not that large or intense, but I hear my HD clattering all throughout my renders. If there is a gain there, let me know.
Thanks
Mark
Michael314 posted Mon, 26 April 2010 at 12:53 PM
Hi Mark,
what you experience is most likely swapping, I had the same effect with larger scenes
when using only 4 GB of RAM. Since I added more RAM, that's completely gone.
If possible, add 2 more Gigs of RAM, that will be much more effective than a SSD.
Best regards,
Michael
Mark@poser posted Mon, 26 April 2010 at 2:00 PM
I appreciate the advice, and I'm sure you're right. I using XP right now though, so I don't think I can get any real gain with a RAM increase until I switch to a 64 bit operating system. I don't know when that will be, but probably my next PC.
Thanks