You've got me thinking now Mark...
How do you know which SSD is compatible with which laptop?
I don't see anything on the listing. I have an HP 15 (Intel Series).
You've got me thinking now Mark...
How do you know which SSD is compatible with which laptop?
I don't see anything on the listing. I have an HP 15 (Intel Series).
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...
OK thanks. Opening any computer is unexplored territory for me though.
I'll research and think about it.
Cheers
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...
Have you got a model number / part number for your laptop? The newer HP laptops use an M2 SSD rather than 2.5".
Methinks McCreed's laptop is neither (new nor that it contains an SSD).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vs6RDWgVqWc
cheers, Mark
Might be worth thinking about some new valves for it as well.![]()
SSDs are definitely the way to go, I've got four 1Tb Samsung 2.5 inch SSDs installed in my studio desktop pc, if your laptop has a 2.5 inch conventional HDD in it that's connected to the motherboard via a Sata cable, you should just be able to take the old 2.5 inch HDD out and pop-in a new 2.5 inch SSD drive, and it should work fine after you've formatted it, the benefit of going with a 2.5 inch SSD is that you'll get faster read/write times which will boost the performance of your laptop a bit.
Check out this website if you're interested in ordering a new 2.5 inch SSD online from them:
www.mwave.com
This is the same company I ordered my four SSDs from online.
I checked and my Lenovo E530 is 8 years old yet runs Sonar X2 as fast as a desktop.
cheers, Mark.
Maybe I should started a new thread for this!
Still weighing the options. Either way it's a huge PITA IMO. Even though I have decent backups there's a whole lot of stuffing around in restoration/recovery that will need to be done.
Laptop is 6 years old.
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...