• Arghblarg
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    01 year ago

    …but if they’re scavenged from old Apple products, who knows how much wear the flash has? It might have a drastically shortened lifetime; that would be very bad for an SSD.

    interface ICs, etc. don’t wear in this way, but Flash memory… I’d never want used flash for my SSD.

    • @kadu
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      201 year ago

      Meh, good enough for a games drive, Google Drive cache and seedbox.

      Beats having Apple products in a landfill because they’re firmware locked and nobody bothered with the password.

      • Arghblarg
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        21 year ago

        Fair enough, so long as one knows what one is getting. If it’s for mostly read-only storage I guess it could be fine, as your use cases suggest.

    • NaibofTabr
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      131 year ago

      It’s far more likely that these chips are new production that didn’t meet the original buyer’s (probably Apple) quality requirements so they were binned and resold to other buyers.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Obviously that has to be reflected in the price of the product. Presumably even more so with storage.

      Also there might be a use case, where cost is paramount and the drive would experience very limited writes.

      I’ve got a personal anecdote that’s not entirely the same, but I’ve bought a bunch of flash chips from china to use with retro games. Those are often salvaged, but they are also cheap and available to buy. It doesn’t matter if the chips can’t take too many write cycles, if you only flash them a couple of times.

      • Arghblarg
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        11 year ago

        Good use case for old flash, and I’m all for saving bits from the landfill if they can be used. Hmm. That reminds me I should get my retro game setup going again…