Optane Latency and Why I've Been Obsessed with Intel's Fire Sale

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 28. 12. 2022
  • So it may not be for everybody, but here are Wendell's reasons for becoming so obsessed with Intel's Optane!
    Places to buy the optane:
    www.newegg.com/p/pl?d=optane
    www.amazon.com/Intel-optane/s...
    **********************************
    Check us out online at the following places!
    bio.link/level1techs
    IMPORTANT Any email lacking “level1techs.com” should be ignored and immediately reported to Queries@level1techs.com.
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Intro Music By: Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    "Lord of the Land"
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    Other music: "Earth Bound" by Slynk
    Other Music: "Lively" & "FollowHer" by Zeeky Beats
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 459

  • @CyberRunning
    @CyberRunning Před rokem +500

    this is the first video where I thought to myself Wendel looks a lot thinner. good on him for making heather choices its definitely making a difference and he looks healthier.

    • @Dgodwin94
      @Dgodwin94 Před rokem +13

      Same.

    • @agenericaccount3935
      @agenericaccount3935 Před rokem +32

      In six months the dude is going to be shooting for deadlift personal bests. Love to see it.

    • @paulwratt
      @paulwratt Před rokem +24

      you too can take up the "I got bit by a Tic" weight loss challenge - near death experience _may not_ be included

    • @lightichigo
      @lightichigo Před rokem +6

      ngl always thought wendell had a good looking face

    • @elonburgers5308
      @elonburgers5308 Před rokem +4

      We're all gonna make it brah

  • @Packetlust
    @Packetlust Před rokem +238

    I really wish Intel hadn't killed these off, and I also wish Micron hadn't abandoned their efforts at a competitor

    • @pizzablender
      @pizzablender Před rokem +24

      Intel probably killed them by having some models or use cases restricted to Intel CPUs. That doesn't make it attractive for the future.

    • @paulwratt
      @paulwratt Před rokem +17

      @@pizzablender Like Wendel says, the _drivers_ are Intel only, but the hardware is not - they probably killed it off because it performed better on AMD platforms .. :)

    • @juanalcan3964
      @juanalcan3964 Před rokem +5

      @@paulwratt Until now i didnt know it, as an AMD user Optane was a No-No for me since it only "works" at Intel, i never dive deeper since is Intel way of doing things like the new OneAPI thing which you cant use the profiler if you dont use an Intel CPU because Intel VTune only runs on Intel CPUs so i didnt expect otherwise

    • @arnox4554
      @arnox4554 Před rokem +4

      Yep... It's definitely pretty clear now that...
      Modern Windows is slow as fuck. LMAO
      My heavyweight MX Linux install with KDE boots in at least HALF the time of non-Optaned Windows 11, and all off a shitty Kingston SSD too. My Windows 8.1 install is different as it's installed to a PCIe 3.0 NVMe Samsung drive admittedly, but even so, it boots in 10 fucking seconds. No Optane needed. Hell, maybe not even 10 seconds. I swear, I'm never using Windows 11. Microsoft nowadays is just a ghost of the giant they once were, and Linux absolutely kicks its ass up and down the road nowadays.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +8

      @@juanalcan3964 If you use Optane as a drive then it works on any system. However the NVMe sticks which are part Optane and part Flash are really only good on compatible Intel systems. I made the mistake of buying one for my RYZEN TrueNAS Core server and could not figure out how to use it so I returned it. Straight Optane is OK but the little 16GB ones do nothing for TrueNAS, may even slow it down. Spend your money on RAM.

  • @nunyobiznez875
    @nunyobiznez875 Před rokem +84

    I remember reading a tech article about Optane when it was first unveiled and thinking that it was the future for storage technology, and promising enough to eventually replace traditional NAND SSDs completely, after it matured. It was, and still is, very impressive, which makes it all the more sad, and a bit tragic, that Intel is just giving up on it. I can only hope that they're giving up on it, because they've got a secret successor in the works, that they've yet to unveil. But, that's probably just wishful thinking.

    • @metaleggman18
      @metaleggman18 Před rokem +2

      Well, it depends. If nand starts to stagnate, or corporate buyers need more resilient ssd storage, we might see Intel either evolve the tech or license it to someone who will. Intel has been feeling the heat from AMD, and I think they're betting on encoding and machine learning (i.e. their gpus) as being a more future proofed business opportunity than continuing their storage solutions. I'm guessing enterprise is just dandy with products like those from kioxia, and work station users are either doing a lot of linear work (think video editing), or are doing most of their work in such a way that optane will only help them in testing, not production, like Wendel mentioned. Sadly, technology is always about what's the most marketable and profitable, not what's best.

    • @taiiat0
      @taiiat0 Před rokem +3

      well, that's true, technically. it is the future.
      but complications like not being able to drive cost down as much means that Consumers just won't Buy it. average joe doesn't care if something is better.
      remember that thing Henry Ford supposedly said.... "if i asked the People what they wanted, they would have said faster Horses". it's rough trying to get average joe to want specific things that are better. they'll want better, but not REALLY know what better means.

    • @arthurwintersight7868
      @arthurwintersight7868 Před rokem

      @@taiiat0 - Is there not a market for using this as a database drive, though? There are plenty of tasks where high random I/O performance is critical, especially in the commercial sector.

    • @taiiat0
      @taiiat0 Před rokem

      @@arthurwintersight7868
      plenty of use for it in Server/Datacenter, since when it was in Production it tended to cost ~6x more than traditional NAND but have ~10x the lifespan, so a net gain for them.
      commerial use SSD's already do hit excellent random performance, but traditional NAND does it via extreme overprovisioning, versus Optane just being good at it inherently.
      obviously despite being so great that wasn't enough on its own considering we're in this scenario now of it being sunset while traditional NAND is still in Production.
      oh well

    • @PSYCHOV3N0M
      @PSYCHOV3N0M Před rokem

      ​@@taiiat0 Would Intel Optane SSD's benefit me for setting up a Plex or Jellyfin server full of 4K Blu-ray rips??
      I want VERY snappy performance.

  • @kansax8253
    @kansax8253 Před rokem +66

    One big thing is missing; asset streaming. Open world games, such as Fallout 4, Skyrim, Conan Exiles, The Sims 3, WoW, etc., do a lot of asset streaming from multiple archives continuously. Unloading a cell as you get near the border, loading a bunch of players' assets, loading a new player's base, that sort of thing. Wonder how the much lower latency would affect stutters and frametimes in those games.

    • @kansax8253
      @kansax8253 Před rokem +14

      ​@@LuggageStardate Nope, that would overload RAM super fast. There's a reason games use asset streaming. For example, Fallout 4 has something like >40GB of texture data easily, without the HD DLC. Skyrim uses multiple GBs just for face textures, and was designed around fitting the entire game into 512MB of RAM.

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Před rokem +3

      IOPS might help but there shouldn't be much benefit from just basic latency. Ideally asset streamed games should be well optimised as well so the loading is at least partially parallel which would suit SSDs better than queue depth 1 workloads, although who even knows with Bethesda games lol

    • @taiiat0
      @taiiat0 Před rokem +4

      faster Devices will always help a bit but Streaming Assets in a game should generally be large amounts of Data mostly Sequentially.
      like was said, the Software needs its Data to be stored kind've as a mess for it to make a big impact. to make games faster on cheaper Hardware, games are already usually optimizing their Data so that it can be loaded pretty much Sequentially to maximize the Hardware the Customer has.
      now..... some games that i could perhaps see a distinct advantage possible, would be say.... Minecraft, or other games like it? where nonpredictable Data is stored in lots of pieces, and also kind've inefficiently. Minecraft having Thousands and Thousands of tiny Files for its World data (instead of something more logical like one File with an internal structure), that's a case where faster Devices could provide use.
      however you also are then up against NTFS, you can only open and close so many Files in a span of time. plus Windows Defender will freak out if you try to perform too many open/close actions on Files a Second (this is something you can solve but 99% of users use the default everything ofc, so).

    • @fermitupoupon1754
      @fermitupoupon1754 Před rokem +2

      I've seen it going through Forza Horizon 5.
      At first I was playing it on my old rig, i5-3570K GTX970 with the game on a 7200RPM HDD. Which was unplayable at speeds above 200kph, even going down "the highway", which is linear and very predictable for the game, the HDD just couldn't spin up the assets fast enough.
      Moving the game to SATA SSD made it playable at a stable 30 FPS. Again far from ideal, but stable and playable.
      Then I upgraded to an i5-11400, built a custom loop, because the GPU apocalypse at the time made buying a 30 series impossible. This killed the CPU bottle neck and gave me 60 FPS stable, capped by vsync.
      Recently I bought a cheapo 20 euro Gen 3 NVME, and now I'm still at 60FPS, but somehow my GPU has gone down from 95% load to 80%.
      The RAM upgrade was much less noticeable. Going from 24GB DDR3-1600 (mismatched RAM 2x8 + 2x4) to 32GB DDR4-3600 (2x16 matched pair) makes a difference, but not so much in games. There just aren't that many games out there which will happily eat up even 8GB of RAM.
      I ran my current setup for a while with a single 16GB dimm and the difference between single and dual channel is very much noticeable, the difference between 16 and 32GB, not really in games.

    • @bosstowndynamics5488
      @bosstowndynamics5488 Před rokem +1

      @@fermitupoupon1754 GPU usage would go *up* or remained unchanged if you had removed a storage bottleneck - if the SSD was able to feed the GPU faster then the GPU would have more work to do. Vsync messes with that a bit but the SSD feeding more data to the GPU won't make the GPU's job easier. Instead, what's much more likely is either a driver update to better optimise your GPU in Forza, or a Forza update to better optimise it on older GPUs.

  • @beansnrice321
    @beansnrice321 Před rokem +18

    So I picked up a P1600X 110 Gb stick based on your videos about the fire sale and I've been playing around with it with mixed results and so far I think I've come up with a pretty strong combo for my computer.
    For starters I pretty much just partitioned the single p1600x into two separate drives.
    One drive is being used with Primocache as an l2 read cache with 4mb of l1 write cache.
    On the 2nd partition I have moved my windows swap file and my firefox cache folder to. I also moved a game that seems to have just endless small files to read in MTG Arena on that partition and I swear this old E5-2690 V4 is singing like it has never sung before.
    If I had some spare cash (lol) I'd buy another stick so I wouldn't have to partition the drive and just dedicate separate sticks to the two tasks. I swear, these days I've been having dreams of optane, lol. The real dream is to get one of those 950 gb or 1.5 tb ones. =d

  • @The_ViciousOne
    @The_ViciousOne Před rokem +53

    It's really sad Intel never got Optane to a production level, were they could really do something to push down the pricing for consumers...
    I mean the 480GB 905P was quiet "affordable" compared to other Optane models or other High-End consumer SSD's in the past,
    but lets be real, most consumers just don't care about latency that much, even though they probably should.
    The combination of PCIe 4.0 and multible TB of storage space for a few hundred bucks in M.2 format, is just too tempting for most customers
    and I can almost not blame them...
    Drive endurance ratings though are another plus point. They are usually higher by a factor of 5-10 on an Optane drive at minimum!
    Or the fact that Optane doesn't need "optimization" or defrag...
    But basically all Optane Models you can get your hands on, are close to either unaffordable or just overpriced, bad deals... At least in the EU.
    I mean I saw a 1.5TB 905P for almost 3000€ so... So unlike the deal at Newegg (which I cant use...) they are usually still above msrp.
    Afterall, I wouldnt mind a few smaller 905P or P4800X/P4801X for my server, NAS or gaming rig,
    buuut... a 480GB 905P is at around 700€+ and a 375GB P4800X is above 1100€.
    So... lets be real, for that I could buy a 3.2TB Kioxia CM6-V U.3 Drive (3DWPD).

    • @movax20h
      @movax20h Před rokem +1

      Reliability figures in terms of endurance for Optane are usually 30-100 better than TLC NAND SSDs. They are better even than SLC.
      I would not be focusing on biggest models. There are crazy expensive. Get what has best $/TB in reasonable price.
      905P is still expensive.
      900P 280GB, is a decent choice.
      Considering pricing, using Optane where it matter, is the best option. For things like caches, write ahead logs, journals, etc. And for things like that you do not need more than dozen GBs usually. If you care about reliability and latency for writes then Optane is worth it. Otherwise just use more RAM.

    • @The_ViciousOne
      @The_ViciousOne Před rokem +1

      @@movax20h Can be even higher than that.
      A DC P480?X has between 30 and 60DWPD. A DCP580?X is already up to 100DWPD, which is just insane, and makes Intels decision even harder to understand.
      Even a DCP1600X has 6DWPD.
      Just for comparison, the average consumer SSD has ~0.8-1.3DWPD and falling!
      A 2TB Samsung 990Pro has ~0.33DWPD! If I did the math correctly, that would correspond to ~57 hours lifetime at 6GB/s.
      Meaning even if Intel would have reduced the durability of the 905P by a factor of 3, they would be still 10 times higher (~3DWPD) in comparison
      to Samsung. And their highest tier barely makes 10DWPD... Just let that sink in. It kind of relativises intels Optane pricing.
      They basically "just" need to broaden the durability level and thus probably the manufacturing cost, and they would be killing the Market.
      Afterall, there is seemingly no alternative in the near future to replace NAND-flash, now that Optane is basically gone.

    • @PSYCHOV3N0M
      @PSYCHOV3N0M Před rokem

      ​@@The_ViciousOne Question:
      Let's say I want to buy an EVGA Intel Motherboard to build a gaming rig and I want the absolute fastest performance with Windows when it comes to opening apps, etc.
      If price doesn't matter, what's the "bleeding edge" recommended setup I should go with? Do I use an Intel Optane SSD as my OS drive or a Western Digital SN850X as my OS drive and an Optane SSD as a second drive?
      Which Optane drive has the best performance?
      Price doesn't matter to me.

    • @The_ViciousOne
      @The_ViciousOne Před rokem

      @@PSYCHOV3N0M Well, "bleeding edge" is kind of relative. Since PCIe5 drives are slowly entering the market, but I can't really say if those make much of a difference in daily use anyway. As for Optane SSD's if you, for whatever reason actually wanted to go that rout: Intel DC P5800X Models. But besides price, and availability, you'd still need to find an appropriate HQ cable or adapter. That's another problem in on itself. 🤔

    • @Akkbar21
      @Akkbar21 Před 11 měsíci +1

      95% of customers will never come close to using the endurance of a bottom barrel QLC nand drive.

  • @__aceofspades
    @__aceofspades Před rokem +14

    Optane is a gift from god, the only issue with it was pricing. Now that Intel is winding it down, I'll be picking up a few more drives.

  • @eggnogg8086
    @eggnogg8086 Před rokem +23

    The boot time test is flawed,
    I'm pretty sure that the optane/xpoint drive was the bootloader drive, and that's why it was much quicker, since it didn't need to wait for the UEFI to load and some of the files for booting windows were already in ram and all it had to load was the login screen, unlike the nand ssd which had to reboot, and load the UEFI, then it's own bootloader, then login screen.

    • @Masaliantiikeri
      @Masaliantiikeri Před rokem +1

      Soo your saying that Wendell this kind of mistakes when he literally recovered data from dead ssd by making database of 1 and 0 from the drive data dump in "You did WHAT with the dead SSD? And the data?".

    • @petarlagator
      @petarlagator Před 8 měsíci

      That got my eye too, well spotted !
      Wendell should have just replugged drives, not kept both in the system.

  • @xantochroi
    @xantochroi Před rokem +10

    you look more healthy and energized wendel ! keep up the good work, and great video !

  • @ericneo2
    @ericneo2 Před rokem +12

    Would love to have a tool and test database that could show the performance gains from latency. It's very hard to explain and show the performance gains from latency to someone.

  • @nogravitas7585
    @nogravitas7585 Před rokem +13

    May be on fire sale elsewhere but I just checked in Australia and they want ~$500 for 280GB or $1000 for 480GB, meanwhile a 1/2TB samsung 990 pro is ~$240/430.
    At these high-optane (octane pun) prices you could buy 64/128GB DDR5 RAM or 128/256GB DDR4 and use the excess for a RAM disk.

    • @Blacklands
      @Blacklands Před rokem +5

      Yeah, same in Europe. And that's if you can even find them at all. I think this is really basically just the US (and maybe Canada). :/

    • @gelerth123
      @gelerth123 Před rokem +3

      @@Blacklands yeah I looked also basically only affordable one is thw 16gb, everything else is 700-900 € with some going to 6000€

  • @axtran
    @axtran Před rokem +4

    I built a HCI storage cluster with nothing but Optane since Intel really wanted to push it a few years ago. It was amazing, and also highlighted Nutanix CVM > VSAN and VMware didn't expect that one coming :D

  • @heathrutledge7631
    @heathrutledge7631 Před rokem +4

    I’ve never had my regular nvme take anywhere near that long to boot. It is usually a 10 second process. Maybe fifteen on a bad day. Not as fast as optane but not over a minute.

  • @grantwiersum7394
    @grantwiersum7394 Před rokem +8

    4 32gb m2s and a pcie adapter card came out to $120.
    Considering the kind of uplift you're likely to see from any other upgrade, I'd say it's worth a shot.

    • @nickmhc
      @nickmhc Před rokem

      Is your pci card going through the chipset? Or straight to the CPU?

  • @metaleggman18
    @metaleggman18 Před rokem +6

    Threw the smaller drive you recommended in the last video into my work/gaming rig, into the x4/x8 electrical slot, installed primo cache, and everything works soooo much faster. I was hesitant to get more ram, as I already have 32gb, but honestly, I just might upgrade to 64gb just to add more primocache ram allocation. Chrome, explorer, and windows in general felt sooo much faster now. Seems to help with a system like mine that ends up using about 10-12gb on standby, without any obvious hogs. When you've got a ton of services running, they add up!

    • @Bob-of-Zoid
      @Bob-of-Zoid Před rokem

      Without any obvious hogs? Windows is the hog of all hogs! I'm running Linux, and with all kinds of stuff loaded, browser, graphics app with huge image with some 30 layers, email program and what not it hardly ever uses above 6GB I only go over when editing video, recording multi-track audio and what not. I have 64GB and haven't even got close to using 32GB yet and I can still add 64GB more! Add to Windows being a resource hog, many other companies that make software for it just see your devices resources as all theirs to waste freely, instead of keeping their programming mean and lean in the understanding you may be using several other programs at the same time. That is frowned upon in Linux, and developers are much better at not hogging resources, to make sure multitasking is smooth with many apps running all at once without causing trouble for each other. Shit Windows 10 & 11 are much leaner than their predecessors because Microsoft used a few tricks from Linux memory management, but with as much crap as it has to load in order to keep it in constant communication with M$, and all of the crap Rube Goldberg contraptions hogging resources in protecting it's proprietary secrets, no wonder it isn't much leaner! Also it's faster boot times are a ruse! It does give you the desktop much faster, but background loading stuff goes on for a while after that, so it just appears that much faster. Try to launch something like Photoshop right away after the desktop appears and notice the significant delay due to Windows system modules needing to finish loading. When My desktop appears everything is up and ready to go right away with the only delay being the weather app retrieving info from NOAA's server, and my email program fetching email from several accounts.
      Really though, I have no problem waiting a minute or two when loading the system or some piece of software, and although lightning fast now on my Ryzen 7 system, it never bothered me, and any delay is well used sipping coffee, blowing my nose or something, hardly something to get bent about. I started on a Sinclair Z81, then DOS's, then a Macintosh Lisa, then Win 3.1on a 386... try using a 28k modem over dial-up and wait 10 minutes for a freaking plain text email to send! Boot times were the least of ones worries.

    • @metaleggman18
      @metaleggman18 Před rokem +1

      @@Bob-of-Zoid Uh...cool, I guess? Linux is fun and all, but I really only use it for dev environments, where I deeply enjoy it, or in the homelab, where it's essential. Not that Linux can't game well, it can, but it's just easier on Windows for what I play. Windows does use quite a bit more resources than Linux, for obvious reasons, especially given the channel we're watching, but on a fresh install, OS is only using maybe 6GB. There's a reason people who aren't crazy like me, with hundreds of tabs open in a web browser on essentially all my devices, can get by just fine with 16GB. It's more the death by attrition of having multiple game launchers, services, programs, etc., running. Most are only a couple dozen MBs perhaps, but when you have almost 200 background processes, it makes the fairly small 100 or so windows processes blush. Anyways, really none of what you said had anything to do with optane + primocache being a neat upgrade to my computer. Also, lol, I had dial-up well into the DSL/Cable era; DOCSIS 3.0 was more or less released by the time I finally got something better than dial-up. I also didn't have, well, any internet until I was almost in high school; I maybe used it once or twice as a child on one of my father's Thinkpads. Speeding up the responsiveness of a computer you use daily isn't really an issue of patience, it's just a fun technical thing to try, especially when it can be done as cheap as this. Computer stuff is fun, why else would anyone voluntarily use Arch, if for no other reason than it's fun?

    • @Bob-of-Zoid
      @Bob-of-Zoid Před rokem

      @@metaleggman18 I was not replying to everything in your comment, just pointing out that Windows is a hog. BTW: how about saving more bookmarks, organizing them and closing some browser tabs?🤔
      I use Arch, and my computer for my business (not computer related), I never got into gaming really. Once everything is in place and certain tasks routine, Arch is stable as a rock and needs little intervention. I rarely open the console, or need to change system files, and can go months without for the most part.
      I too am a speed freak, just because I can!😁 I wouldn't mind Optain... but it's somewhat expensive and as they often have done with other tech, intel just decided to drop it! 😕I still don't have an M.2 NVME yet🥴. I just built my Ryzen 7 system and then my car broke down, the bills for everything got insane... and I just never got around to getting some, but now going with Optain sounds like no longer a good option. I remember going from hard drives to SSD's, now that was a massive improvement, I was like 🤯Kapoof! Going to NVME's will be a speed increase over SSD's, but not nearly as much in comparison.

  • @beansnrice321
    @beansnrice321 Před rokem +4

    So, update on the optane. I went ahead and got a 2nd stick, despite my better judgement and went so far as to use one of the two p1600xes as a new windows boot drive and (of all things) I'm seeing a significant fps boost in multiple games.
    That's right, I got a FPS boost from Optane!
    An not an insignificant boost. The two games that stand out the most to me were mechwarrior mercenaries 5 and mechwarrior online.
    I changed nothing else about my system and had always assumed I was cpu limited because both games are heavily cpu bound. Despite my rtx a5000, I would struggle to get break 50 fps on both games. Ray tracing was on for MW5.
    After switching my boot drive to optane and doing nothing else, I saw that 30-45 fps go to about 70- 90!
    I nearly double my fps from changing my goddamn boot drive! 0_o
    I even used the same steam apps folder install of both games from my previous system running off of a pcie3.0x4 nvme.
    My guess, based on watching which disks were being used when running both games, was that there was some stupid driver overhead going on where the games were caching files, shaders maybe, to my boot drive.
    Looking deeplier, I see that many games frequently access driver files and cached shaders from disk during game play.
    Thus the stupid low latency of optane really seems to grease the wheels of some graphics pipelines.
    Either that or my old nvme was mega mid level, lol.
    Either way, if you're game, you might want to benchmark some games to see if optane has any effect on their fps.

    • @Frozoken
      @Frozoken Před 4 měsíci

      P1600x is really underrated. At a queue depth of 1 it can literally match the p5800x in random reads for way cheaper. On my system with it as my OS drive and a 13600k I'm getting just about 105-110k read iops at qd1 with most reviewers with the p5800x getting 95k-110k. Sequentials are mediocre especially the writes but the drive is so small it's basically irrelevant and you get basically all of the throughput at qd1 sequentially unlike nvme drives which get like 30-40% worse sequential performance with only 1 queue. Only real complaint with the drive is the fact that it doesnt scale in random performance with higher queue depths nearly as well as it should (roughly 60% more iops at qd2 vs the typical 90%). Was hoping up to qd4 it'd be like a p5800x randomly but it seems that's only true for qd1 but it's massively cheaper so oh well.
      Boots are about 10 seconds quicker than my wd sn850x (flagship gen 4 drive) and system performance is much better too.
      Do you think I should buy primocache tho? I'm currently on trial and using 32gb of my optane as l2 for my wd drive which now contains most of applications and all but 1 of my games. Games seem to load a few seconds quicker but even then I'm not sure and that's all I use on primocache and it eats up about 3gb of ram so idk if $30 is really worth it. Main benefit would be as you said potentially smoother frame times in some games and having a cache like that is the only way to get most of the benefit if there is one across all games

  • @Haamre
    @Haamre Před rokem +2

    @Level1Tech Do you require to have the programs (i.e. games) installed on the Optane drive, for it to be cached - or does it suffice to have it as a system drive?
    Or - do you get the benefit of a faster game loading time even with if Optane is the "game drive", and the system runs on a standard SSD...?

  • @christopherjackson2157
    @christopherjackson2157 Před rokem +9

    I think optane is coming back with a rebrand as a cxl2 network attached memory solution. You didn't hear it from me ;)

    • @greggmacdonald9644
      @greggmacdonald9644 Před rokem +3

      That's rather difficult when Intel isn't producing it anymore, and have stopped any development, with staff they no longer have. This isn't like Arc, where they aren't really producing any cards anymore, but have kept the division intact responsible for it. We may see Arc on Desktop at some point, but Optane is done. Unfortunately.

    • @christopherjackson2157
      @christopherjackson2157 Před rokem

      @@greggmacdonald9644 I'm not sure how much of the ip is actually being reused. Clearly manufacturing of optane as such is over, as you point out.

    • @greggmacdonald9644
      @greggmacdonald9644 Před rokem

      @@shraf2kay No, they didn't, not as far as I can tell. Kioxia are working on a version of NAND Flash that may work better than existing Flash, but announcements are one thing, and actual product is another. Even then, 3D-XPoint outclasses it.

    • @Xamy-
      @Xamy- Před rokem

      @@greggmacdonald9644 do you have a source on this Greg, this is the first I have heard of it

  • @pkt1213
    @pkt1213 Před rokem +7

    Windows caching is RAM really screwed me over about 10 years ago. Wrote a python script to turn a spreadsheet into 3 dimensional data using the in memory workspace and creating a temporary database. When the script was finished, there was no data janitoring needed. Well running it in an IDE had no issues but just running the .py (like a scheduled task) would consume about 12GB of memory. I had 16GB but Windows was holding about 6GB and either wouldn't give it up or couldn't fast enough. Took several weeks to figure it out.
    If your home server is faster than your work server...you're probably a federal employee.

    • @FutureChaosTV
      @FutureChaosTV Před rokem +3

      Windows memory management is so freaking fucked.
      Also, taskmanager hides the amount that is really blocked and permanently locked away.
      That's why I had to get another 16GB of RAM so heavily modded Minecraft wouldn't blow up the whole system. It took 23 GB while Windows showed that 2-4GB were still free.
      Which was a lie.
      The linux method of using excess free RAM as drive cache is so much better.
      It doesn't look RAM away that isn't actually used.

    • @LA-MJ
      @LA-MJ Před rokem

      He meant public cloud

    • @danilfun
      @danilfun Před rokem +6

      @@FutureChaosTV
      >while Windows showed that 2-4GB were still free
      If task manager showed it, it was most likely true.
      The issue is that there are 2 types of memory: requested (usually called "commit") and claimed (actually allocated).
      And windows task manager focuses on the claimed memory, because it reflects the actual physical usage.
      The issue is that requested memory on windows is also limited. It's not limited by the amount of physical memory you have, but still limited.
      The way Linux does this is it allows a program to request however many memory it needs. If the program wants 1 terabyte of memory, Linux will say OK. Buuuut, if the program were to try to actually use this much memory, it will hard crash (if you have swap, it will happen after the swap has also been used up). Even worse, many other programs might also be affected, so you might have to reboot to fix your system.
      The way Windows does this is it absolutely guarantees that the requested memory will be allocated as soon as the program needs it. No unexpected crashes.
      However, this does come at a cost: you need some place to allocate this memory. If you don't have enough RAM for this, Windows will use swap (pagefile).
      If your pagefile is not big enough, you can end up in a situation where you have free RAM but no program is allowed to use it.
      The solution would be to increase the size of the pagefile.
      >The linux method of using excess free RAM as drive cache is so much better.
      Windows also uses free ram as drive cache.
      And this is one of the reasons why buying more RAM is better that increasing the pagefile to allow your programs to use 100% of the RAM.

  • @aliancemd
    @aliancemd Před rokem +2

    I bought 2 of these, thank you for letting us know. I use these on dev machines. Optane is also quite a lot faster in 70% read/30% write scenarios, which is quite common for compilations. Also, the lifetime on these is ~30+ times bigger(P5800x ~300+ times) than on the latest generations of NAND flash - I’ve had NAND flash corruption already…

  • @guy_autordie
    @guy_autordie Před rokem +3

    Autumn saving the day, again.
    I like all your lil' annotations lately!

  • @irispettson
    @irispettson Před rokem +4

    What's wrong with your SSD boot time? It really shouldn't take that long even for a regular SSD.

  • @JuanExplorador
    @JuanExplorador Před rokem +14

    I think the big difference in windows boot time is that windows is almost fully loaded when you get to the "choose an operating system" prompt. If you choose the default option it goes directly to the login screen, if you choose any other option it has to fully reboot

    • @tron121
      @tron121 Před rokem +3

      Is that really true though, I thought the options was the UEFI BIOS prompt. And if so doesn't that mean the OS isn't even awake yet.

  • @johnhaines764
    @johnhaines764 Před rokem +2

    Thanks Wendell' for the video. Very timely as I have been investigating AMD RAID performance and highlighting that raw bandwidth is not always the best metric for performance!

  • @curvingfyre6810
    @curvingfyre6810 Před 9 měsíci +3

    for general users, optane always made most sense as a boot drive, and small cache drives. I daresay there is no system that wouldn't benefit from one of each, even now after optane was shelved.

  • @EthelbertCoyote
    @EthelbertCoyote Před rokem +8

    Am I right in thinking one of these drives would be amazing for file per frame based vfx workloads or would that be more of a sequnetial thing?

    • @FutureChaosTV
      @FutureChaosTV Před rokem +3

      A good preemptive software or OS or disk driver should load the files in batches beforehand.
      *SHOULD*

  • @volppe01
    @volppe01 Před rokem +2

    We have used optane drivers as boot disks and source code disks. Build times on large web projects 100.000+ files decreased with double digits after we made the move. Also load time within visual Studio for intelligente dropped to almost 0 after the upgrade well worth every penny we spend on them.

  • @tomstech4390
    @tomstech4390 Před rokem +2

    16GB original m.2 optane.... what do I do with it?
    (only have x99 and various ryzen systems so it has never been used since I bought it, I run mx500s for all my storage boot and game drives).

  • @ewitte12
    @ewitte12 Před rokem +2

    I had a 480GB 900p for a while and ended up getting a 2TB Samsung drive for the same price. Right now I have a 2TB 980 pro, 3.84TB PM983 and 7.68TB PM9A3. Thing is I also run 64GB of ram so the speed isn't always noticeable.

  • @Sitarow
    @Sitarow Před rokem

    Did the same thing for my son's PC definitely worth the upgrade. Where did you find that $50 off nice!

  • @ADB-zf5zr
    @ADB-zf5zr Před rokem +3

    I still have a 16GB Optane that I bought OEM (almost zero packaging) when they were on offer, I think it was about £20. I bought it to play with, rather than use, but use it I did, it's main (and obvious) problem is its capacity, I wish I had bought the 32GB version, not least because they literally doubled in price a week later....

  • @enerjustics
    @enerjustics Před rokem

    Do the optane H10 NVMe drives perform the same as the one showcased in the video? Thank you

  • @PakoSt
    @PakoSt Před rokem +8

    Curses... now I want to see if we can stuff 2230 Optane drive into the Steam Deck 😄 lets see if there are some affordable options out there (if it is at all possible of course...)

  • @ajhieb
    @ajhieb Před rokem +8

    I've found a good (for me) use for the small (16GB/32GB) Optane nvme drives. Perhaps I've just been buying crappy USB3 thumb drives, but copying ISOs over to a standard thumb drive always seems painfully slow. I stuck one of those 32GB Optane drives into a USB3 nvme enclosures, installed Ventoy (so I could boot from multiple ISOs) and now I have a drive with pretty much any OS I want to install that's also way faster than a standard thumb drive. Yeah, it's kind of a waste for something that fast, but it's no more wasteful than letting it just sit in my junk pile.

    • @telepathicdragon
      @telepathicdragon Před rokem

      that's a great idea, i'm definitely stealing it if i can find one of decent size to do this with.

    • @giornikitop5373
      @giornikitop5373 Před rokem

      all thumb drives are basically crap when it comes to writes, i've thrown lots of them to the trash. yeah, you didn;t really needed an optane, even the crapiest m2 nvme would have been a huge improvement, but i get it, those things are cheap and crazy durable, they are basically super low latency slc-like drives, ideal for lots of things like thumb drives, os drives for routers/firewalls, nas etc. too bad intel canceled them some time ago...

    • @javaman2883
      @javaman2883 Před rokem

      Even the crappiest NVME drive would do great in that use case. But a 512GB NVME would give you space to keep dozens of ISOs available to boot from at any time.

    • @ajhieb
      @ajhieb Před rokem

      @@javaman2883 That's true. But as luck would have it, I don't have any 512GB NVMe drives kicking around, but I do have a 32GB Optane drive to spare. It has more than a dozen ISOs and I've yet to fill it up. Like all tips, YMMV.

    • @mannotwiththeplan
      @mannotwiththeplan Před rokem

      Thumb drives suck. Buy a Samsung/Sandisk micro SD card and a USB card reader.

  • @kevinerbs2778
    @kevinerbs2778 Před rokem

    do these optane Drives have the same controllers on them that the NVMe SDD's have?

  • @MonstieurVoid
    @MonstieurVoid Před rokem

    Measuring boot time form the Windows boot menu could be invalid. The GPU runs at native resolution so it's possible the kernel and drivers are preloaded and reused if you boot into a compatible version of Windows. If you enable BitLocker, the boot menu turns into a low res screen as the kernel is on the encrypted partition.

  • @skypickle29
    @skypickle29 Před rokem

    so on this amd system wendell is running primo cache to get this kind of boot speed? how much of the ram is needed for primocache to make a difference?

  • @M3PH11
    @M3PH11 Před rokem +2

    5:46 so this boot test was from a system recovery prompt. Not a cold boot. This will impact load time. Also, timing how long it takes to just log in is not a cold boot test either.

  • @katodevon
    @katodevon Před rokem

    SUPER interesting. Very clear video, but Intel's naming scheme leaves a lot to be desired. Seeing H10 Optanes at somewhat reasonable prices. A little "too reasonable" - are those worthwhile for this sort of use? Or is the 905p series the way to go?

  • @HandFromCoffin
    @HandFromCoffin Před rokem

    OK so if I've got a just OK NVMe SSD drive would it be worth getting one of those 118GB Optaine drives and use that Intel software to cache SSD?

  • @Pandemonium088
    @Pandemonium088 Před rokem

    So the optane boot is 6seconds while the normal nvme is 1min. Right now I get around 12s on my boot so with optane should I exepct 2-3seconds?

  • @Jimster481
    @Jimster481 Před rokem

    Could I use these optane drives in a HL DL350 with a 7402p using Ubuntu and Virtualizor for VMs?
    I mean it seems like these would be killer for client VMs for my server company.

  • @kwrinn67226
    @kwrinn67226 Před rokem

    I really wish I had known about this prior to upgrading my nas. It's only pcie gen 3 and used the wd black an1500, got one for zfs cache and one for vm storage. Wish I had been smarter about it.

  • @NC7491
    @NC7491 Před rokem +2

    I have a large poker database that takes a while to refresh when I change filters, so I am always on the lookout for technical solutions to speed things up. When 900p came out, I went and bought one. It was the only drive that showed tangible improvement in performance. When I upgraded from a SATA to an NVME drive for example, I saw no change in performance. However, the improvement optane offered didn't seem worth the cost, in that it only cut 10 seconds out of a 110 second load time for a $500 premium.
    In other words, I am still interested, still curious about how much of an upgrade 905p is compared to 900p, but I would like to see the price drop further than $400 in order to give it a try. After all, this drive needs an PCIe adapter card to make it work and that's an added cost.

    • @Xamy-
      @Xamy- Před rokem +2

      No it doesn’t. It comes with a u.2 to m.2 adapter in the box..

    • @NC7491
      @NC7491 Před rokem

      @@Xamy- Thanks, that's good to know.

  • @n1kobg
    @n1kobg Před rokem +4

    Im on SSD with optimized Windows & boot for 16-18sec (My old AsRock z67 Extreme did 11-13sec). If that boots for 5sec I probably can at least half that. Windows has pre-defined wait stages for drivers, services & software to load. Also can further skip & disable animations ect. 54sec boot is with old mechanical drives.

    • @mannotwiththeplan
      @mannotwiththeplan Před rokem

      I use my PC every day, so I sleep my computer. Resumes in 2 seconds.

    • @n1kobg
      @n1kobg Před rokem

      ​@@mannotwiththeplan Ye but thats not a real boot. Laptops also start quick but they also use the drive for cache, like fast startup, hybernation & sleep mode. Im talking about a real boot. You basically said I dont turn off my PC & completely missing the point.

    • @mannotwiththeplan
      @mannotwiththeplan Před rokem

      @@n1kobg I guess what I'm saying is that if you use your computer daily, I don't see the point of booting the computer at all. Put it to sleep and it just uses a few watts of power. When I need to step away for an hour, I put it to sleep. But if you want to boot and optimize the boot, more power to you.

    • @n1kobg
      @n1kobg Před rokem

      @@mannotwiththeplan Ye, Im guessing office work or other light tasks. Even the phones have to be restarted from time to time.

  • @zenairzulu1378
    @zenairzulu1378 Před rokem

    Suddenly remembering Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in Stephen King's The Stand TV miniseries with "the bring out your dead"

  • @baeromez7535
    @baeromez7535 Před rokem

    Okay so I bought the 905P 960GB. I want to use it as my OS drive. Is it okay to just clone my Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB with something like Macrium? It's only storing around 100 GB at the moment.
    I have never cloned an OS drive before, just wondering if there are any pitfalls to be aware of.
    As I understand it, my motherboard (Asus Prime Z390-A) has 2 PCIe 3.0x16 slots which are connected directly to the CPU. Currently, one is holding the GPU and the other has a U.2 to PCIe x4 (x16 physical) adapter holding a Seagate Nytro 960GB. There is also a x4(x16 physical) slot on the motherboard which is connected through the chipset, currently rocking another Nytro 960 U.2. The OS drive right now is an M.2 970 EVO Plus in an M.2 slot connected to the chipset.
    Would it be best to run the new OS drive directly to the CPU or through the chipset?
    I'm currently running primocache and using half of my RAM (DDR4 3600MHz, 64GB total) as separate cache of various sizes in front of each my disks. I have 8GB of RAM specifically as read/write cache (with a 10 second write delay) in front of the 970 EVO Plus with the OS on it.
    Should I do something similar with the optane?
    I'm also considering going up to 128GB of RAM just to use it as a huge cache in front of several disks. Would I get similar performance by using ONLY the optane as cache instead, or would stacking the RAM>optane>disk be beneficial. I guess that's really just the same question in a different coat.
    I'm not expecting life-changing results from any of this, just having fun. Thanks!
    (PS- nothing critical is ever happening on this machine, it is overclocked to 5GHz all-core 24/7)

  • @Ferdinand208
    @Ferdinand208 Před rokem +1

    11:35 seems to me preloading would help. Why doesn't windows or Linux have a preload function? It would work like this: you click on an icon and it starts loading the program. While loading it tracks what files are loaded. Now you have a profile for that program. Now I can right click the icon and choose hotload. Hotload means the profile will start to be read into memory and will fill your free memory. When you click the icon the program is preloaded and will start faster than optane.
    As long as you have free memory you can hotload programs. It is different because you as a user can tell the OS what you want it to do.

  • @aiouniyaz8398
    @aiouniyaz8398 Před 15 dny

    Just got the 1.5TB one on newegg for $399! Gonna be playing w it soon, cant wait!

  • @_velogeek
    @_velogeek Před rokem +3

    Yeah I need to know what add-in card that is at 2:45 it's exactly what I've been looking for.

    • @ajhieb
      @ajhieb Před 4 měsíci

      As soon as I saw that card, I searched for "2:45" to see if anybody else was asking (and hopefully had an answer)
      I could use a few of those things.

  • @TechNaOkami
    @TechNaOkami Před rokem +4

    I thought SC worked well with the drive because the way SC loads you do the initial load into the world and it never "loads" anything again. The game constantly streams the entire game in and out as needed.
    It's why you can't play that game with an HDD it's simply too slow at pulling an asset into the game when it needs it.

  • @foxs49er
    @foxs49er Před rokem +2

    I'm curious. I just built a new PC with 13900K and RTX 4090. I put a 2TB SK Hynix P41 Platinum for game drive and a 1TB Samsung 980 Pro for boot drive. I debated on the 990 instead but I figured I was already super overkill on SSD speed. When comparing the 990 to the 980, there really didn't seem like very much of a difference. I can't imagine any perceivable difference between the two. Now if it was PCIE Gen 5 then I might have jumped shipped for it. But to me it seemed like an end of generation squeeze every last ounce of performance product. Am I wrong?

    • @sander373
      @sander373 Před rokem +1

      You most likely won't see a difference going from 1 decent SSD to a high end SSD. That is unless you do huge file transfers. Even with a new PCIE 5, I simply don't think even that will have any sort of "big" difference since most SSD manufactures don't go for high random R/W 4k queue depth numbers but more so high SEQ benches. Simply put high end SSDs are purely for workstations, and Intel optane would be more beneficial to everyday use.

    • @foxs49er
      @foxs49er Před rokem +1

      @@Cooe. What are you talking about. The 980 Pro is Gen 4 PCIE

    • @Madhawk1995
      @Madhawk1995 Před rokem

      @@foxs49er he’s saying for day-to-day consumer use an optane drive would be a better jump for you than a PCIe GEN 5.0 nvme. The only thing that will be faster on gen 5 NVMe’s are the sequential reads and writes. I have the same setup as you. That’s why I’m looking into optane now as well.

  • @aarcaneorg
    @aarcaneorg Před rokem +2

    Dude, that low profile 4x m.2 riser. Where did you get that? I've been trying to find one of those for ages, with 4 m.2 drives on a single sided low profile bracket, for basically exactly the use case you're using it for here!

    • @Level1Techs
      @Level1Techs  Před rokem +1

      Ebay

    • @aarcaneorg
      @aarcaneorg Před rokem +3

      @@Level1Techs Got a product page or exact model name? I've been searching ebay, amazon, and even google for like three days looking and can't find one like that

    • @ajhieb
      @ajhieb Před 4 měsíci

      @@Level1Techs I too would be interested in more details as all of my eBay searches come up with the the dual sided cards. (and I can't manage to squeeze a dual sided one into any of my servers) Also, I see a bunch of what appears to be solid state caps on the card. Does it have some power loss protection?

  • @Zarathustra-H-
    @Zarathustra-H- Před 6 měsíci +1

    I'm kind of curious with how hard Starfield constantly slams the drive resulting in in game stutter in many cases, even on a 990 Pro, if an Optane can help there.
    I'm not going to wonder for long. I'll be decomming a 960GB 905p from my server soon, and when I do, I'm popping it in my desktop for some testing.

    • @Frozoken
      @Frozoken Před 6 měsíci +1

      Update? I'd also like to know. Either way I know for certain the lower bandwidth won't matter, there's no change it does worse. Don't remember the last time (if I have at all) seen over a single gB/s of read usage from a game

  • @BBWahoo
    @BBWahoo Před rokem +1

    You should see how well optane does in a threeway primocache stack, by which I mean having your boot drive being an enterprise drive (Micron 9200), with your secondary and tertiary drives being consumer drives like samsung, all separated but all relying on optane as a level 2 cache, latency, what latency!?
    I can load all of my games in less than 5 seconds FLAT! It's INSANE!
    AND-- AND, I CAN ALSO MY OPTANE DRIVE AS A SECONDARY BOOT DRIVE FOR BSD, ALL THANKS TO THE "Volatile Storage" OPTION IN PRIMOCACHE, AMAZING!!!
    THANK YOU WENDEL, YOU ARE THE REAL O(G)ptane!

  • @tehpwnerer6821
    @tehpwnerer6821 Před rokem +1

    Impossible to find a seller - even following your links in the video description.

  • @RANDOMNATION907
    @RANDOMNATION907 Před rokem +2

    unrelated question: *_Hey Wendell ?!?!_* . . . . out of complete curiosity, are you a Star Citizen or Elite Dangerous kind of guy? and why? . . . just curious, there is no right or wrong answer.
    regardless, Thank you for another great year of content. Happy New Year to you and yours.

  • @austin2994
    @austin2994 Před rokem

    Serious face gains over the past few
    Months. Good job! As always, great content

  • @deoxal7947
    @deoxal7947 Před rokem

    Do you think pcie passthrough on the steam deck is feasible?

  • @sezwo5774
    @sezwo5774 Před 10 měsíci

    Does anyone know if optane memory (the sticks) can be used to "accelerate"/cache an optane standalone SSD drive? Has anyone tried this? What were the results?

  • @cinemaipswich4636
    @cinemaipswich4636 Před 10 měsíci

    Since Optane is being closed down, I wanted to buy a dozen large storage NVMe's to use, in a couple of 4x4x4x4 PCIe cards, for TrueNas. But I have a 32C-68T AMD Epyc CPU, and I hear I cannot use those things together.

  • @ChristopherNutt
    @ChristopherNutt Před rokem

    I remember powering on my pc and going off to make a tea and still getting back in time for boot.

  • @xlr555usa
    @xlr555usa Před rokem

    I might get an optane to put games on it. Where online are there good 🔥 sales? What about running Linux on octane? Also how long will Intel support octane, will there be software updates.

  • @abavariannormiepleb9470
    @abavariannormiepleb9470 Před rokem +6

    How bad is Optane’s latency advantage capped if you use multiple Optane drives as a RAID0,1 or 10 for Windows? How is AMD’s software RAID driver doing on AM5?

    • @Nunkuruji
      @Nunkuruji Před rokem +1

      In CrystalDiskMark I lose RND perf and gain SEQ throughput perf in amd soft raid. MP600s.

    • @movax20h
      @movax20h Před rokem

      Latency does not change with RAID. You can have 50 drives in RAID, latency will be the same in normal use. RAID on mechanical drives does improve average latency, but this is because you often try to saturate IOPS, and mechanical drives have really bad latency and IOPS. On Flash, it barely change.

    • @abavariannormiepleb9470
      @abavariannormiepleb9470 Před rokem

      @@movax20h In theory yes, however the software quality of AMD’s RAID drivers has “room for improvement”, bugs and not updated in over a year.

    • @movax20h
      @movax20h Před rokem

      @@abavariannormiepleb9470 What I said, has nothing to do with AMD RAID drivers. I do not use AMD RAID drivers. I use mdadm and ZFS on Linux.

    • @abavariannormiepleb9470
      @abavariannormiepleb9470 Před rokem +2

      Shame on me for thinking an answer to a question about AMD RAID Drivers on Windows might be based on data from AMD RAID Drivers on Windows.

  • @Sunlight91
    @Sunlight91 Před rokem +3

    NAND is simply good enough for almost everyone.

  • @jimmy8x541
    @jimmy8x541 Před rokem +2

    Would love to see how optane performs with Microsoft Flight Sim

  • @Frozoken
    @Frozoken Před 4 měsíci +1

    2:04 No the optane is at least 3x as fast in latency compared to the 990 pro if not 4x, especially with the p1600x or p5800x. The 1st gen optanes are way closer in random reads to 2nd gen than u think its just that those drives were tested with much slower cpus (ie what was avaliable 5 years ago) which significantly worsens random latency/iops. The 990 pro gets about 40 microseconds of read latency, my p1600x with a 13600k gets 9 microseconds of read latency.

  • @Ellipsis115
    @Ellipsis115 Před rokem

    11:29 noted
    11:41 Im finding that post and also bookmarking that link

  • @computeremail9063
    @computeremail9063 Před rokem +1

    We need gen 4 optanes back in m.2 form factor. Super good boot drive.

  • @Shkib0y
    @Shkib0y Před rokem

    Thank you! I have been in love with 905p 960gb since it launched. I feel so spoiled by it. I actually grabbed 2 of the discounted ones recently to homelab with in RAID 0.

    • @javaman2883
      @javaman2883 Před rokem

      Problem would with that, a RAID 0 setup will increase latency. Question is, will the increased latency of RAID 0 be enough to slow the dual Optane down to NAND speed?

    • @exilonone
      @exilonone Před rokem

      @@javaman2883 I'v heared that using RAID solution like HighPoint SSD7580B not only does not increase latency, but can even reduce it. Unfortunately I have no opportunity to check it.

  • @thebrainfan
    @thebrainfan Před rokem +2

    “My home MySQL server is faster than production” - so I’m not the only one having better gear at home than at work 😊

  • @memberman
    @memberman Před rokem

    Now this is an interesting video. Thanks for doing your thing!

  • @greggmacdonald9644
    @greggmacdonald9644 Před rokem

    Hey Wendell! I've been considering getting a 1.6TB U.2 P5800X in part bc of your vids, and I'm struggling with where to possibly purchase one. In April 2023, the resellers fronting on Newegg and Amazon seem to have lots of dodgy reviews, so I'm unsure who to possibly trust. Who would you recommend as a source for this?

    • @Level1Techs
      @Level1Techs  Před rokem

      Cdw probably. You need a special cable or a legit server to use them otherwise they will error because the drive is faster than the cable. I found a genz extension with redrivers that work wellv

    • @greggmacdonald9644
      @greggmacdonald9644 Před rokem

      @@Level1Techs Thank you, much appreciated!

  • @AudiS4orce1
    @AudiS4orce1 Před 25 dny

    Can someone explain if Optane, in 2024, makes any sense for a Desktop machine (running AMD Ryzen 7000), either as cache drive or boot drive vs. top SSDs (Solidigm P44 Pro), OR, as a cache drive for Synology NAS?!

  • @onepercent3697
    @onepercent3697 Před rokem +1

    What about latency when playing a game is there a difference

  • @andrew1898
    @andrew1898 Před 2 měsíci

    Howdy. So I can't use any nvme drive for an optane stick replacement?

  • @Hamisback
    @Hamisback Před rokem

    Do you have any extra star citzen codes you'd be willing to part with =) ?

  • @reptilespantoso
    @reptilespantoso Před rokem +1

    these are more expensive here the last few months (retail Netherlands). interested in low latency for audio production ("real time" is a thing there).

  • @skyhigh1803
    @skyhigh1803 Před rokem

    Well a great year that was batyushka Wendell I hope next 2023 year will be even better Happy New Year batyushka Wendell and a very Merry Christmas!!! Servers rule!!!

  • @CycahhaCepreebha
    @CycahhaCepreebha Před rokem +5

    I got some optane to play around with. Not on any kind of fire sale, unfortunately, I had to pay the full 3000 RMB this stuff costs on Taobao, but whatever.
    It performs really well as a swap drive on my workstation, which wasn't unexpected, but in ZFS unfortunately it turns out to be a pretty mediocre L2ARC for my NAS' HDD pool. Even after two full days of warming up the dataset before benching it, it only just outperforms the cheapo Kingston A2000 I used before it. It might do better as a SLOG, but I'm a rebel and run my pools sync=off, so...
    I do so wish someone who knows ZFS would upstream some SSD optimisations. The benefit wouldn't be just for optane, normal NVME SSDs would also do great with it. Getting 2GB/s on a pool I know can easily push 14GB/s under LVM RAID really hurts.

    • @Level1Techs
      @Level1Techs  Před rokem +5

      Metadata special device if you can mirror it is pretty magical

    • @CycahhaCepreebha
      @CycahhaCepreebha Před rokem +1

      @@Level1Techs Unfortunately I bought one enormous optane instead of two medium ones. I suppose I could buy a medium one, mirror that with a partition on the enormous one, and use the rest of the enormous one for something else.
      The workstation has more than enough RAM to just keep all metadata in ARC, and I don't really use the NAS in such a way that it needs ultra low latency, so I'll probably try to come up with some other use for the optane. I might try splitting it in three and running my workstation pool in striped ZFS with each SSD bcached with an optane partition. If the actual topology is hidden behind the bcache ZFS might actually saturate a drive for once. I back it up to the NAS every day anyway, even if it does corrupt I'm not losing much.
      I've had this crazy idea of splitting my SSDs into four partitions, encrypting each partition with LUKS to hide the topology from ZFS, and striping all twelve partitions together for a while now, maybe if I throw some optane bcache in there... ZFS and boredom does horrible things to my mind.

    • @christopherjackson2157
      @christopherjackson2157 Před rokem

      @@Level1Techs absolutely. That's the number 1 best use case for it I've found.

    • @Prophes0r
      @Prophes0r Před rokem +1

      Careful with the L2ARC. It will burn through even an Optane drive unless you are constantly hitting the same data all the time.

    • @Xamy-
      @Xamy- Před rokem

      @@Prophes0r source? How come people aren’t having more dead drives out there with l2arc?

  • @infeedel7706
    @infeedel7706 Před rokem

    That was a great primer to (the dead) Optane, now to find some... Thanks from Down Under

  • @jessedeptula1511
    @jessedeptula1511 Před rokem +1

    I wonder if your Minecraft server would benefit from Optane as a boot drive? I imagine having low latency would help load chunks faster than a standard Sata SSD. No idea how that could be bench marked but it would be cool if there was a performance increase.

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Před rokem

      Perhaps for preexisting chunks, but terrain gen still relies on the CPU

  • @kaisercreb
    @kaisercreb Před rokem

    I bet loading of victoria 2 would be a great test since it has so many tiny files to load and create on launch

  • @Quarternewt
    @Quarternewt Před rokem +1

    I got one. Figure it's now or never. If they get cheaper, I'll just buy more.

  • @bcrcoto
    @bcrcoto Před rokem +1

    I get why Optane Memory died, but the Optane SSDs were really good, also the old intel SSD Pro 7600p line was great.

  • @creed5248
    @creed5248 Před rokem +1

    I almost was wondering how much my bios slows it down or if it does affect it at all ??

    • @FutureChaosTV
      @FutureChaosTV Před rokem +1

      First BIOS boots than it starts the bootloader from the "disk" drive.
      So, the first seconds are due to the BIOS startup.
      And this can be longer than the actual load time of an optimized OS on SSD's after that point.

    • @Lishtenbird
      @Lishtenbird Před rokem +2

      Yeah... With a decent SSD, booting time for Windows was never much of an issue for me, the BIOS part is. Total booting time _increased_ when I moved from a SATA drive to an M.2 NVMe because of how the board polls peripherals. And if you got more cards in there, it'll take longer.

  • @Caleb5761
    @Caleb5761 Před rokem

    Wendell you look great! Healthier than ever

  • @WaterZer0
    @WaterZer0 Před rokem

    But how fast would it load a non-bloatware OS?

  • @m5sib
    @m5sib Před rokem +1

    As someone who dual boots 2 Windows 10 instances on my daily driver I can tell you this boot test ISN'T A FAIR TEST. Which ever instance is set to be the default will always boot faster from the selection screen. I dual boot 2 Windows 10 that's on 2 partitions of the same drive, if I select the default it immediately starts to load that Windows, if I choose the second instance it reboots the whole pc before loading that Windows. IDK if it just needs to use the other instance boot loader or if Windows is trying to cheat and it preloads some stuff before you select which OS, so when you choose the non default one it has to start over... So basically it starts to run the default OS after the bios, and if you choose that one at the boot screen it just continues on, but if you choose the other option it starts over with that OS so it's not a direct comparison unless you also change the default OS before restarting.

  • @michaelmcconnell7302
    @michaelmcconnell7302 Před rokem +1

    would low latency ram like ddr4 cl14 enhance the effect of the low latency storage when it comes to load times, or does ram just have to be fast enough to keep up with storage?

    • @MrMoxes
      @MrMoxes Před rokem

      RAM will usually always be faster because of the route storage has to take to read/write. Once something is cached, you won’t see much of a difference. Unless you’re running CL36 or a memory dependent app, you should be fine.

    • @michaelmcconnell7302
      @michaelmcconnell7302 Před rokem +1

      @Mark A. Stephens I run 4000 cl 18. I know for gaming it makes basically zero difference compared to the 3200 cl 16 I had before.

    • @MrMoxes
      @MrMoxes Před rokem

      @@michaelmcconnell7302 I mean, sure CL18vsCL14 is a bit of a difference but it's hard to measure in a game. I run 3200CL22 but it's for a 5800X3D, so more the IF-clock than pure speed.

    • @michaelmcconnell7302
      @michaelmcconnell7302 Před rokem +1

      @Mark A. Stephen I had 3200cl16 when I had a 12400. I switched it to a 13600k and thought the 3200 might be holding it back, but even cinebench scores are within margin of error. Oh well 😄

    • @MrMoxes
      @MrMoxes Před rokem +2

      @@michaelmcconnell7302 CL16 is fine for DDR4 & is quite common. If you want to chase lower latency, you could try memory tuning to see if you can get down to CL14 or there abouts. It can be time consuming & most don't see much benefit but it can be fun.

  • @fr8trainUS
    @fr8trainUS Před 5 měsíci

    My gf had a work supplied small PC for work at home that from push of the button to windows booted was 8 seconds. First time I noticed that I did😮. Should have opened it up and poked around!

  • @MrKent481
    @MrKent481 Před rokem +5

    I'm curious about the difference for workloads like building software. This is an area where it appears that the latency at low queue depths is more important than the throughput.

    • @The_ViciousOne
      @The_ViciousOne Před rokem +3

      Well, they are basically fantastic for everything that moves any kind of small bits of data from and to the drive...
      So as Wendel said, for example random 4K, like MS Windows itself...

    • @botfap
      @botfap Před rokem +2

      Optane provides a very good performance increase for most software build chains. We are an embedded linux dev house and we use a combination of 905Ps and P5800X optane drives in our build farm and workstations. An example, this week Im working on a simple ish linux kiosk system with QT, wayland, html-engine, nginix and php using buildroot and a self built toolchain. On my desktop (AMD 5950X), this builds from scratch in about 1 hour 42 mins with an optane 905P on PCIE 3 vs 2 hours 19 mins with a Samsung 990. On top of this my optane drive has been thrashed daily for 3 years now and will easily last another 10 years. Standard nand flash drives wear out in 6-8 months because of the high levels of write action on the ssds
      On the build farm the difference is even bigger. There we have 64 core Threadripper 3990X CPU's and standard NAND flash doesnt offer low enough latency to keep the CPU's fed. Here we tend to do multiple builds in parallel (8-16 normally) and in this scenario build time is reduced by approx 45% when using P5800X optane drives vs Samsung PM1725 enterprise ssds
      I can see us sticking with the optane drives through the next 2 or 3 generations of hardware as there is nothing on the horizon that can match them. We spent the last few months buying up stock where we could find it and even bought some used ones on ebay because they are bullet proof and pretty much dont wear out. I really dont understand this decision from Intel. The is still a decent sized market of customers that are more than happy to pay much more for optane than NAND flash because the performance benefits are so big

    • @movax20h
      @movax20h Před rokem

      For building software. Just get enough memory, so everything is cached. So storage performance is not a factor.

    • @serena-yu
      @serena-yu Před rokem

      In a public report, Intel claimed 25% less software building time over Samsung 850 EVO.

  • @stephenxs8354
    @stephenxs8354 Před rokem +1

    Need to test optane as a cache disk.

  • @hk07666
    @hk07666 Před rokem +1

    Does anyone else remember when Windows 7 would cold boot in like 3 seconds flat? Good times.

  • @Chris-yc3mm
    @Chris-yc3mm Před rokem +2

    Is the fire sale a us only thing? Still looks to be more than full price in the rest of the world

  • @darth3pio
    @darth3pio Před rokem

    Thanks Autumn

  • @MK-xc9to
    @MK-xc9to Před rokem +6

    In short , Optane makes sense if you have lots and lots of small Files to load , my Boot Time into Windowsis 25 -30 sec , its not competly loaded at that point , but i can already start eg the Browser , i have no Optane . Samsung has Server SSDs , called Z-SSD with Z-NAND and claims :
    Enabling faster access and response, Z-SSD provides 5 times lower latency at 20 microseconds, compared to today's leading NVMe™ SSDs*.
    The latest storage server with Z-SSD is to see its latency reduced significantly, delivering a tangible performance acceleration.
    The single-port, 4-lane Z-SSD features Z-NAND chips with a cell read speed 10x faster than ordinary NAND1) chips. With the maximized data bandwidth available through the PCIe® interface, 1.5GB LPDDR4 DRAM, and a high-performance controller, the Z-SSD performs 1.7 times faster2) in random read at 750K IOPS.
    You can buy an 480 GB ( pure SLC) Drive for ~ 300 Dollar ( Samsung SSD 983 ZET )

    • @PSYCHOV3N0M
      @PSYCHOV3N0M Před rokem

      So you're saying those Enterprise Samsung SSD's are superior in random performance vs Intel Optane?
      I want the fastest Windows PC possible.
      Price doesn't matter to me.

    • @MK-xc9to
      @MK-xc9to Před rokem

      @@PSYCHOV3N0M Then NO , Optane has low Latency and loads randow Files faster , it only loses in loading big Files vs nomal SSDs (it dont has to be Samsung )
      But Optane is basically dead , it will be phased out , Micron has discontinued 3d X Point ( Optane) in 2021

    • @segundacuenta726
      @segundacuenta726 Před 2 měsíci

      @@PSYCHOV3N0Mthe fastest would be the p5800x in raid 0... but if you want to keep it reasonable then p5800x and pcie gen 5 nvme drive as second drive. It depends on how much space you need , the apps you use and your budget. However for same cases the hdd drive is not the main thing but RAM for example for audio work having all samples in DAW loaded in RAM and whatever other programs you use open as well..

  • @Kowalamaster
    @Kowalamaster Před rokem

    The monty Python beggining is awesome!

  • @shanksisnoteventhatstrongbruh
    @shanksisnoteventhatstrongbruh Před 11 měsíci

    would a 5700X system benefit from using a Optane P1600X (118GB) as a boot (+light programs) SSD over a 512GB 5GB/s read PCIe Gen4 SSD???

    • @Frozoken
      @Frozoken Před 5 měsíci

      Ik its late but my boot time nearly halved actually going from a top of the line gen 4 ssd to the 1600x so yes.

  • @thewarriorpainter9159
    @thewarriorpainter9159 Před rokem +1

    Ok stupid question, why is the 990 Pro so slow on boot? Is this an AM5 thing? My AM4 system with a Seagate 530 Firecuda 2TB for the boot drive will boot in 7 seconds… I am genuinely confused here.
    Whole system specs
    MSI X570 Godlike
    5950x (water cooled)
    64g RAM 4000 CL16 (overclocked and water cooled)
    4 Firecuda 530 drives
    ASUS 3090 Strix (water cooled)

    • @Level1Techs
      @Level1Techs  Před rokem +1

      It's because I've got so much cruft in this image. I picked it specifically to use to clone to both drives rather than doing fresh installs. Imagine a year's old windows install and how wonky they get

    • @thewarriorpainter9159
      @thewarriorpainter9159 Před rokem

      @@Level1Techsok… I think I am understand now. Optane is wild, I think I’m going to pickup some of the M.2s for my workstation, I do a lot of back and fourth between Blender/Zbrush all in one sitting as well as other Adobe apps such as photoshop… aka unoptimized shop. Optane may be useful, I have to keep learning about it.

    • @thewarriorpainter9159
      @thewarriorpainter9159 Před rokem

      @@Level1Techsoh and thank you for the reply!!!