N Nitro1 macrumors 6502 Original poster Apr 16, 2009 303 0 Dec 9, 2009 #1 i am looking into a Mac pro and putting a solid state in it just for the operating system to keep them all separate. My question. How well if at all do they work in mac's and do they have any that are mac certified???? Thanks
i am looking into a Mac pro and putting a solid state in it just for the operating system to keep them all separate. My question. How well if at all do they work in mac's and do they have any that are mac certified???? Thanks
GGJstudios macrumors Westmere May 16, 2008 44,561 959 Dec 9, 2009 #2 Any SSD that physically fits and connects should work. There's no such thing as "Mac certified".
Y ymarker macrumors member Sep 6, 2009 99 23 Dec 10, 2009 #3 Once you go ssd you'll be spoiled. I ended up switching out all my computers (3) to ssds.
MythicFrost macrumors 68040 Mar 11, 2009 3,944 40 Australia Dec 10, 2009 #4 Based on what I've read, the Intel X25-M Generation 2 SSD is the best, I have the 160GB version in my Mac Pro with one of the Icy Dock ssd to hdd converters (I got both from ebay). Two articles worth reading: http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=3531&p=1 http://anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3607&p=4
Based on what I've read, the Intel X25-M Generation 2 SSD is the best, I have the 160GB version in my Mac Pro with one of the Icy Dock ssd to hdd converters (I got both from ebay). Two articles worth reading: http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=3531&p=1 http://anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=3607&p=4