Third Party SSD upgrade announced!!!

Check this out:
http://www.macrumors.com/2010/10/27/256gb-ssd-upgrades-for-new-macbook-air-annou nced/

drsailer wrote:
Probably never.
http://www.geek.com/articles/chips/apple-stops-sale-of-photofast-256gb-ssd-for-m acbook-air-20101130/
That's really too bad. We can shop Macsales.com and upgrade our desktops and portables. Now Photofast has had their hand slapped and we can not have an even faster MBAir. What a bummer.

Similar Messages

  • Upgrading to Yosemite with Third-Party ssd's

    I'm thinking about Upgrading to Yosemite on my mac mini, primarily because I want to update to the latest version of Final Cut X, and this is only supported on Yosemite.
    I put this off long ago because I'm using Third-Party SSD's, and I know that there were issues with this on Yosemite. If possible, I'd like to update now, but I'm not sure if this is a stable system for what I'm using. Here are my current specs below:
    Mac Mini Late 2012
    OS X Version 10.9.5
    Processor 2.5 GHz Intel Core i5
    16GB 1600 MHz DDR3 Memory
    Startup Disk - 2x Crucial M550 256GB SATA in RAID-0
    When I looked into this many months ago, I remember reading that Yosemite doesn't work well with non-apple SSD's, something about trim not working or otherwise. Does anyone know if this can be done now, or if there's a thread with a fix for this? Everything that I can find in searches is from a year ago.
    Any help is greatly appreciated!

    Based on the discussions I've read Yosemite will work on a 3rd party SSD, but as mentioned above, TRIM isn't supported.
    One option is to create a new partition (~30- 50 GB), install the new OS, and ‘test drive’ it. If you like/don’t like it it, you can then remove the partition. Do a backup before you do anything. By doing this, if you don’t like it you won’t have to go though the revert process.
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  • Third-party SSD with Yosemite

    Hi all
    I would like to upgrade my MBP Early 2011 with an SSD. I read different forum posts about TRIM support in 10.10 for third-party SSDs. Can somebody tell me, if there are any SSD I can install without having TRIM disabled. What happens if TRIM is disabled or what does that mean to the performance and the disk itself?
    Thanks for your answer,
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    harem-doctor wrote:
    ...What happens if TRIM is disabled or what does that mean to the performance and the disk itself?...
    This link gives a good explanation of what TRIM does and why it's needed on an SSD. In reading it, you'll notice that HD's and SSD's do not function in the same way and TRIM helps to compensate for the difference. These days all SSD's have some form of Garbage Collection built into their controllers but without the assistance of TRIM, they can't tell the difference between valid and deleted data so unnecessary data movement has to take place which decreases performance and increases wear on the SSD.

  • Install Lion over Snow Leopard on third party SSD.

    I am currently running Snow Leopard 10.6.8 on a third party SSD (Intel 510 series), and am using Trim Enabler 1.2.  Everything is running well.
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    I would do the following:
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         http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817146604
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    Give it time to index everything with Spotlight.
    That would be the most clean way to upgrade.  Some have been lucky with Lion upgrades but if you have a ton of legacy stuff installed as well as custom tweaks, etc.  Then you are likely to run into issues.  Best to start clean and neat and migrate your data over.  I would even re-install the Apps individually. 
    Make sure you are not running any PowerPC Apps which rely on Rosetta because that won't work in Lion after the upgrade. 

  • How to install third-party SSD as boot disk in MacPro 5,1

    I had so much trouble with this that I thought I'd post a recipe that others could follow.
    The first thing you should know is that it's not possible to get a non-Apple SSD recognized in a sled slot of a MacPro 5,1.  It just doesn't see them at all, even if (as some suggested) previously partitioned as a GUID partition (which works in a MacBook Pro, but not a MacPro 5,1).  This is true even with the most up-to-date EFI firmware.  You're going to have to use a PCIe adapter card.
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    It's possible that SSDs would be visible on the Velocity card even before repartitioning, I don't know as both of my drives had been repartitioned prior to trying the Velocity.  So, it might work ... but you might need to partition externally.
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    Then you should read these.
    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1804704&highlight=sonnet+tempo+pro
    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1721573&highlight=sonnet+tempo+pro
    This was strange but has to do with how startup disk and nvram interact
    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1795765
    I think your problems were solvable and not that the Sonnet card and 5,1 is not bootable, in fact the 5,1 is easier, there are more supported cards.
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    The PCIe card gets seen and treated as external and therefore 'eject' but of course you can't when it is the system boot drive.
    One thing I found last week and meant to mention:  After installing or changing PCIe cards, RESET SMC made all the difference in the world with the long boot delay. Some PCIe cards will add a few seconds, system has to search the device tree which now shows another controller with multiple devices - and sometimes NVRAM and SMC are what I will call "dirty" and need to be rebuilt and reset.

  • Do i Have to TRIM my Third party SSD on my MacBook Pro 2011?

    Do i have to TRIM my third party SSD on my MBP 2011? I should do it?
    it helps? i like performance this would help get there? what app i should use? im running Mavericks

    This article might give you some inisghts:
    http://www.techspot.com/news/52835-understanding-ssds-the-need-for-trim-overprov isioning-and-more.html
    This is what I use:
    http://www.cindori.org/software/trimenabler/

  • Update to Yosemite on third-party SSD

    Hello,
    I have a Macbook Pro earlies 2009, and I would like to update to Yosemite. I read that there are problems with third-party SSD.
    I had to change my original HD to an Samsung EVO SSD.
    Is this right?
    Thanks in advance,
    Best regards
    Wolfgang

    I use Samsung EVO SSD and no issues.  Just realize you can no longer use Trim Enabler without some risk.  I decided to not use Trim.

  • Third Party SSD Drive Modul

    Hi Community,
    is it possible to install a third party SSD (512GB; 3,5") drive modul in a new Mac Pro (build 2011) as system drive?
    Thx & Bye Tom

    The hatter wrote:
    There are lots of fud and misconceptions when it comes to SSDs in particular. 
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    But the post of Grant Bennet-Alder concerns me more than a loss of performance. Why it is dangerous to clone a normal disk to a SSD module?
    Thx & Bye Tom

  • Recommended third-party SSD brands

    Looking for recommendations for third-party SSD manufacturers to switch from my MBP Mid-2010 13'" internal hard drive. What have been your experiences to switching to a solid-state drive from a Mac originally bought with regular hdd's?

    It will benefit, but not as much because it only has a 3.0 Gb/s bus. You need a 6.0 Gb/s bus to get the maximum capabilities of the SSDs made for that bus. The vendors you mention are all highly reliable.
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  • Third party memory upgrades?

    Hi,
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  • Adding third-party SSD drives to Xserve

    Has anyone tried this? I would like to buy a new Xserve and migrate to 10.6, but since my application would benefit greatly from SSDs, I would like to buy build an Xserve with a SSD boot drive, and two SSD drives in RAID1. Since Apple doesn't offer SSDs as a drive bay option, has anyone here successfully done it on their own?
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    ...Rene

  • Logic board and third party ram upgrade on Macbook

    I bought a new macbook about a month ago and the only change i made to it was to install third party ram myself. The logic board broke on Friday. Apple was kind of enough to replace the logicboard for free even though I had third party ram in there which they said violated the warranty. I called other world computing where I bought the ram and they said there was no way the ram could be the cause of the logicboard failure even if I installed the ram wrong. Is this true?
    My real question is what do I do now for upgrading my ram. Do I buy mac ram and pay the extra money or can I use third party ram and not have to worry about it causing damage to my system? Whatever the resolution I don't want to void the warranty in any way.

    *"which they said violated the warranty."*
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    Yes

  • Third-party hardware upgrades to improve performance in AE?

    Hey Folks,
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    Mylenium wrote:
    No. Not since 15 years ago (ICE board for Final Effects).
    Mylenium
    Good lord. I had two--not one, but TWO--of those cool but utterly useless boat anchors.
    We were a victim of marketing.
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  • Trim support in mountain lion for third party ssd

    Hi,
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    Solved by shurcooL
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  • How to download Yosemite when using a third party ssd

    I currently have a 13" macbook pro with retina display. I was running Mavericks just fine with my Transcend JetDrive 720 480gb SATA III SSD installed. When Yosemite was released, I downloaded it and everything seemed to be going well when it installed, until I restarted it. When I restarted it, it prompted me to log in with my password, and after I put in my password, it got stuck about midway through another loading screen.
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