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Computer Hardware
2 TB SSD for video editing?
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<blockquote data-quote="SirVer" data-source="post: 2434587" data-attributes="member: 98538"><p>The best way to determine this is to look up the data sheets/detailed specs on the manufacturer websites (or on reviews) and check the TBW (Terabytes Written) spec; for example, the P3 Plus 2TB has a TBW of 440TB, meaning that you could write 100GB to the SSD every day and expect it to last around 12 years. That said, depending on the kind of bitrates you intend to be working with, you're much more likely to hit some sort of defect with the SSD before hitting its write endurance limit, so I'd go with the one with the longest warranty first and foremost.</p><p></p><p>Honestly, for this use case, unless you're dealing with multiple video streams of bitrates above 100Mb/s, I don't think you'll hit any real bottle necks, even without a DRAM/SLC cache, but that's just a guess on my part - you'd have to ask someone who has experience with this kind of workload.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SirVer, post: 2434587, member: 98538"] The best way to determine this is to look up the data sheets/detailed specs on the manufacturer websites (or on reviews) and check the TBW (Terabytes Written) spec; for example, the P3 Plus 2TB has a TBW of 440TB, meaning that you could write 100GB to the SSD every day and expect it to last around 12 years. That said, depending on the kind of bitrates you intend to be working with, you're much more likely to hit some sort of defect with the SSD before hitting its write endurance limit, so I'd go with the one with the longest warranty first and foremost. Honestly, for this use case, unless you're dealing with multiple video streams of bitrates above 100Mb/s, I don't think you'll hit any real bottle necks, even without a DRAM/SLC cache, but that's just a guess on my part - you'd have to ask someone who has experience with this kind of workload. [/QUOTE]
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2 TB SSD for video editing?
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