I have a SATA3 SSD with speeds of 550MB/s (really 525MiB/s), but it's connected to my SATA2 motherboard, so it runs at almost half speed... Despite that, it's still faster than any hard-drive I've ever used previously
Funny, that's
word by word what I was going to write. SSD to SSD copy on SATA2 on my computer delivers around 280-290 MB/s according to what Windows Explorer says, which is pretty much the theoretical maximum minus the latency the driver takes to send commands and such.
That's stunning, because usually when someone tells you "300" it means "yeah, you know, 150 in the regular case, 180 if you are lucky...
but in theory, it can do 300, but of course only if [long list of unrealistic conditions]". Think of an "extreme speed 32GB/s" USB stick. You can be really happy if you get 10 out of the promised 32GB/s, and half that when writing.
Getting 280-290 out of a promised 300 in everyday operation is just fucking awesome.
So, while SSD is apparently really limited by the bus, does it matter? Not really, it's still incredibly fast (...and I assume it's probably even an advantage for the device's lifetime -- if data comes slower than the device can handle, it can probably do a much better job at caching, coalescing writes, and rearranging blocks and whatever it does. Well, I don't know, but maybe... is my thinking).
I hope you're getting a SATA 3 mobo soon, those 500MB/s SSDs cost an arm and a leg...
Not really, no. A 256G SATA3 solid state disk costs about twice as much as a 1T conventional disk, granted. But compare that to what a graphics card or a CPU costs, and consider what it gives you. I have two Vertex4 256G (and no normal harddisk other than the one I put in the mobile rack for backup), and it's the best ever investment I made.
POST beep to Windows 7 login in 8 seconds, no noticeable delay when starting any "normal" program, roughly 100% faster build times, and 3-4 seconds for "ugly fat pigs" to start up, such as OpenOffice (instead of 45-50 seconds). And that's without silly tricks like preloaders.
Now of course if you need 2-3 terabytes of storage, SSD does come a bit expensive... but if you're a bit sensible with the junk you hoard, you can live perfectly happily even with a single 128G SSD. There's always NAS for very little $$$ if you have the need to store a few terabytes of MP3s or movies, and access time really doesn't matter at all for these.
I'm using a NAS from WD, which apart from coming configured as dumb as possible (parking head every 10 seconds), works very well. Plug in cable, works. 5 mins of setup to make it behave less dumb, and you're done. Plus, you have an ultra-low power Debian server you can run Subversion (or Git, if you will) on, for free.