To me the real question for this product is why??!? The real bottleneck is at the CPU not the hard drive anyway. In fact this was stated as much on the November 2005 issue of Maximum PC on page 103 (I was thinking about this thread and happened upon this information tonight while reading on my lunch break). At least for high-end gaming and I suspect that to be the case for other software demands as well. If someone needed a fail safe I guess this might fit the bill although I think on this issue the money can be better spent on a mirrored Raid drives.
It really depends on your applications. Some will load everything into memory and run quickly. Others try to limit memory use regardless of what is available and constantly load from and save to the hard drive. Windows itself has a nasty habit of accessing the swap file even when memory usage is only the OS sitting there doing nothing. Boost HD performance for programs that insist on accessing it constantly and your performance will increase.
One example. SETI @ Home. On one system I had to swap out the HD for an older slower unit. SETI processing took 50% longer. I was thoroughly disgusted and bought a HD that was even faster than the original that was swapped out, performance increased by 10% over the prior peak speed. SETI at home is not memory intensive at all but it does read and write to the HD quite frequently. SETI on one of these ramdisks should speed up noticeably.
If I get one I think that I would try it with SETI just to calibrate the performance boost.
1/ SETI only on the RAMDisk.
2/ Swap file only on the RAMDisk.
3/ Both on the RAMDisk.
I'll just have to wait until the hit the local market.
Here is another related device.
CompactFlash IDE adapterWhat you get
My review CF-IDE came from VME in bubble-wrap, without so much as a page of documentation. Fair enough; if you're ordering one of these things, you're expected to know how to plug in an IDE device.
If you were wondering whether CompactFlash cards really could work as plain old IDE devices, this adapter ought to put your doubts to rest. The thing's just, essentially, a pin converter. 40 pin IDE connector on one side, standard pushbutton-eject CompactFlash socket on the other, power connector hanging off on a wire. It doesn't even have an activity light.
Install the OS on one of these, put the swap and temps on the i-Ram board. Minimum boot time, maximum perforamance.