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Trim enabler for 10.6.8
Trim enabler for 10.6.8













  1. #TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 MOVIE#
  2. #TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 INSTALL#
  3. #TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 FULL#
  4. #TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 FREE#

Under the Sun a glossy panel is a liability. LCDs were popularized by laptops, that are used outside. Price for proper lighting was not an issue either, as the computer was a godsend in terms of production costs. The medium was print on those days and doing critical color in a randomly illuminated room was not an option. Professionals were controlling the workplace light, so reflection was just something control for. The fact that the CRTs were glossy was not an issue. When the LCD appear people insisted on staying with the CRTs because of gamma and other characteristics. People at the business side used glossy screens too, and buy those anti reflective panels ( ).

trim enabler for 10.6.8

I am old enough to remember : For years people used glossy screens for color critical work. They shouldn't instead consider them disposable with a 3 year usage life. People tend to think of mechanical hard drives as devices that last forever. And if the format is every threatened I'll invest in replacement media and make the transfers.

trim enabler for 10.6.8

I figure the small cubic safe I bought just for storage will last an entire career.

#TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 FREE#

I'll write the data twice, put it back in it's static free bag, and it goes in a fireproof safe offsite. Everything I created or worked on in 2013 will go on a 300gb drive (light year) I picked up for I think $29. I use these small mobile drives for one of my annual backups. Any mechanical driive that's been in use over 3-4 years should really be replaced if you depend on that drive for work or backing up files. and movies/video access the drive continuously.Ĥ. The more your program accesses the drive, the longer your battery will last over a mechanical HDD.

#TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 MOVIE#

In some cases like when watching a movie from a HDD. Because SSD's use less power they'll run cooler and your battery will last longer. I think you're safe with 7mm and 9mm drives with any modern Mac product, though I tend to really like the 7mm drives (all I recommended are 7mm) when adding a second drive to a Mini with an OWC kit. You might run into compatibility issues where the thickness of the drive is concerned. in contrast external drives often come formatted for PC/Mac out of convenience, but either one can be wiped clean and formatted for the other. Typically hard drives come unpartitioned and ready to format in any system. The OCZ Vertex and Vertex 150 are too new to know for sure, but I wouldn't expect issues of compatibility.Ĭompatibility with files in another issue, this is where you'd have problems IF you didn't delete any partition the disk came with, made a new one, and formatted it with the Mac OS. I've used the Samsung 840 Pro, Crucial C300 (not recommended any longer, but it was hot in it's day), Vertex 3 and 4, Intel 510, 520, 530, and others with Mac's. Suggestions? I am completely clueless about modifying laptops, I have only fiddled with desktop boxes, and not too much there.Ģ. I am less clear on the details about what sort of HDD/SSD hybrid would work on my MBP v.6.2. Keep current HDD as an external back up drive.

#TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 INSTALL#

Get a very large (1 TB or more) HDD with onboard SSD buffer, and install in main bay. Bigger SSD gives some growing space for photo files to spill over from the HDD.Ģ. Move current HDD and all photo files to the optical bay, move the optical drive (SuperDrive) out and use as an external for the few times I load programs via CD.

trim enabler for 10.6.8

Decent sized SSD (480 GB?) in main bay as the boot/programs/computational space drive.

#TRIM ENABLER FOR 10.6.8 FULL#

I have considered two relatively inexpensive options to get more space onto the MBP and also to get a little more speed out of the machine over and above the speed generated simply by having more free disc space (I am at 440 GB full of 500 GB total).ġ. (I have two 2 TB backup drives and a 500 GB traveling minidrive). I would prefer to keep my images consolidated on one HDD, using external HDDs only for backups. I am still (STILL) running OS 10.6.8 very happily, I don't care about multi-touch pad. I am still quite happy with my mid-2010 15" MBP v.6.2, dual core i7, 2.8 GHz, 8 GB RAM, but I am getting cramped with its 500 GB 7200 RPM HDD.















Trim enabler for 10.6.8