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I use my computer mainly for programming - Java, IntelliJ IDEA.. it's a bit of a slow IDE, especially on opening a project / loading up the IDE. I also use the eclipse compiler with it, but there are still some make operations that are slowish.

Would I feel a noticeable difference (core i7 desktop 32GB), if I installed 2 SSD in a RAID-0 configuration? Does anyone know the answer?

It's not really a question of the money, just seems stupid if I won't get any benefits.. if I will get some noticeable benefits then it would be interesting.

Mikey
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  • Unless you know for sure your tools are I/O-bound, any answer would be a guess. – Blrfl Oct 14 '15 at 14:08
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    A single SSD is likely sufficient. – Daniel B Oct 14 '15 at 14:13
  • Do you already have an SSD drive running your OS and IDE? If not, this upgrade alone should show huge improvement. – Nelson Oct 14 '15 at 14:16
  • One good SSD should be plenty – Linef4ult Oct 14 '15 at 14:33
  • yes, sure - I have an older generation SSD - OCZ Vertex 3 480GB (530MBps/450MBps) .. just really wondering why the load time is so long ... I also strangely notice my 1TB regular drive thrashes during this load process... not really sure why.. only noticed that particular aspect (the 1TB media & File History backup drive) today, so I need to investigate further – Mikey Oct 14 '15 at 15:47
  • kinda stupid the question got moved though.. I asked it in programmers because I wanted the opinion of programmers - hopefully familiar with that particular IDE - instead it gets labelled as a possible duplicate of a general question asked on a different site, whereas this is a specific use case question. Kinda like if I asked a question about oranges and it gets labelled as a duplicate of a question about fruits. So what I'm taking away from this now is - maybe yes, maybe no – Mikey Oct 14 '15 at 16:24

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RAID-0 provides only more bandwidth, unless you work with large files (multiple gigabytes, like movies) then faster SSD (more IOPS) fill be better that RAID-0 made from slower devices.

user158037
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  • as a side note, why exactly is it better for gaming? I mean the games can still run on normal hard drives or single SSDs... I see the gaming notebooks are big on it - I'm tempted to get a gaming notebook for work (not gaming) – Mikey Oct 14 '15 at 15:48
  • @Mikey: Probably because most games nowadays load many megabytes of textures and background images. More bandwidth = smoother operation. – TMN Oct 14 '15 at 17:55