@Paddanx:
EDIT: Du måste direkt länka bilden
Jo jag trodde först det var något galet med den nya browsern BRAVE som jag använder, men hittade felet.
Tack för svar, ännu en gång, var inne o läste på lite nu om rapid mode, det lät ju bra först, men jag fattar att det kanske mest inte egentligen gör så mycket nytta, skall läsa på lite mer
har du några synpunkter på RAPID mode att vara eller icke vara
EDIT
Jag hittade denna summeringen i ett test, och då jag mest använder min maskin till att från avstängd sätta på den, surfa lite, kolla lite videos och spela, sedan stänga ner igen, så finns det nog inte mycket i snabbhet att hämta för mig, men det verkar ju inte skada heller, och att den anv ca 4GB av ram minne då jag har 16 så lär det ju inte ställa till något heller, så jag låter den väl vara på då det inte heller skadar.
"REPORT ANALYSIS AND FINAL THOUGHTS
RAPID mode is a sweet extra feature that Samsung packed with their Magician Toolbox bundle. It allows for many Samsung SSD owners to enable RAM caching on their system in a quick and easy way. Once it is enabled, all the work is automated. The user can simply resume using the system as normal, but now performance is improved.
In testing, Samsung’s synthetic benchmark showed a night and day difference in performance with RAPID mode enabled, but it didn’t feel like it in our perceptible use of the system when enabled. To test out why, we benchmarked our startup time and application load times. As a result, startup was slower, but it was so minute a difference that it shouldn’t cause anyone to lose any sleep over it. Application load times also proved to gain no benefit, however, we were testing only the programs themselves at first. After testing some work files, it followed a similar trend. Recently accessed files should prove to have a faster retrieval speed after reboots, however they did not. Our testing methodology proved RAPID did not afford any benefit outside of Windows default caching behavior in these instances. It wasn’t until our workload testing was done that we saw a performance increase.
Our final testing with PCMark 8 gave us some better insight on how RAPID can improve a system’s performance. Average latency was cut in half and the total latency was cut down by more than that. The average bandwidth results proved something a bit different at first, steady state performance showed to be lower, but when in the recovery phase, average bandwidth shot up to speeds nearly triple to that of the system with RAPID disabled. Based upon our results, we can tell that RAPID actually does work and it really can significantly speed up real world performance.
So in all, RAPID does indeed increase a system’s performance. In day to day usage start up and opening application times will not be affected, however, when it comes to actually working on projects, RAPID will help to speed things up."