So I installed an SSD in my MacBook Pro


Recommended Posts

I bought this 17" MacBook Pro in 2009 and it has served me great in that time not a single problem with any part of it. But I felt recently it was feeling a little sluggish. Especially when compared to my desktop hackintosh.

So I had a few SSD's laying around. None of them were big enough for all my data (Music, Images etc) but big enough for the operating system and my applications. So I bought one of these: http://compare.ebay.co.uk/like/280857760565?var=lv&ltyp=AllFixedPriceItemTypes&var=sbar&cbt=y

Basically it is an optical drive shell that lets you put a 2.5" hard drive in your laptop where the optical drive was. I never use my optical drive anyway and I do have a USB optical drive for my desktop so if I really needed one I could just use that.

So anyway the reason I'm making this thread is to share just how amazingly fast my laptop feels now. I reinstalled Lion on to the SSD (fresh install) and everything is just so fast. It boots in 1/6th the time. Apps open with not even a single bounce on the dock. On my old Hard Disk chrome would bounce 3-4 times before it opened now it opens instantly after clicking its icon.

I'm really impressed. Also if any of you are considering doing the same thing I have a few tips. You know the OS X Alias system? Where by you right click a file or folder and select "Create Alias" these aliases are not just dumb shortcuts like on Windows. These aliases are recognized by the operating system as symbolic links. What this means is for example I can go to my iTunes folder on my Hard Disk right click it, create an alias then move that to where the iTunes folder should be on my SSD. Then when I open iTunes it thinks its accessing my music from my SSD but instead it's using that alias and retrieving it from my hard disk.

By using this Alias feature I've been able to keep all my data (Video, Music, Pictures, Virtual Machine Disks etc) on my Hard Disk but seamlessly use them as if they were on my SSD without losing the fast boot times the SSD provides or the instant launching of all my Applications.

So have any of you guys done this kind of upgrade yourselves?

I know we're in the Mac section of Neowin and I don't own one, but I have to give you two thumbs up on the upgrade. From the day I installed my first SSD on my desktop PC I knew I couldn't use a computer without one.

It's one of the best upgrades you can make considering even pre-built systems come with at least 4GB of RAM and dual-core CPUs.

  • Like 2

Wow, thanks for the hot tip with the Alias feature.

I upgraded my 2011 model to a Vertex 3, and just laugh when I see other people opening up Photoshop or Avid. :rofl:

Its a great upgrade, although you naturally sacrifice space.

It's not really a problem for me though, I like to keep all the important stuff centrally organised on my NAS. :)

You know the OS X Alias system? Where by you right click a file or folder and select "Create Alias" these aliases are not just dumb shortcuts like on Windows. These aliases are recognized by the operating system as symbolic links.

Welcome to 2006 ;)

53rb5k.png

Enjoy your SSD, ive done the same thing on My PC and totally love it. I really don't know why i never got an SSD sooner!

POST screen to ready PC in around 12 seconds, still amazes me 8 months later.

Welcome to 2006 ;)

Enjoy your SSD, ive done the same thing on My PC and totally love it. I really don't know why i never got an SSD sooner!

POST screen to ready PC in around 12 seconds, still amazes me 8 months later.

Actually OS X has had this feature since Jaguar in 2002. I've been using it since Panther when I got my first OS X machine but I thought I'd mention it in this post because it was so relevant :)

I take it you've enabled TRIM support in Lion?

Yup!

Actually OS X has had this feature since Jaguar in 2002. I've been using it since Panther when I got my first OS X machine but I thought I'd mention it in this post because it was so relevant :)

Oh indeed i agree, its almost like it was created for people with SSD's. I can see more people using it in the future now SSD's are really taking off.

Windows does appear to be able to do it with folders outside the Documents folder, just with the command line so OSX has actually implemented it much better if you can do it anywhere with a click.

Oh indeed i agree, its almost like it was created for people with SSD's. I can see more people using it in the future now SSD's are really taking off.

Windows does appear to be able to do it with folders outside the Documents folder, just with the command line so OSX has actually implemented it much better if you can do it anywhere with a click.

Yes it can be done with the command line in Windows. However you can install this application: http://schinagl.priv.at/nt/hardlinkshellext/linkshellextension.html#download

To do it by right clicking folders / files the same way it can be done on OS X. I use this application on my Windows install to run certain steam games on my SSD even though my steam folder and the majority of my games are on a 2TB Hard Drive.

  • Like 1

Enabling TRIM on OS X actually hurts performance:

http://recoverymonke...d-without-trim/

Those tests were performed with Snow Leopard. I'm running Lion. I don't know if that affects anything but Lion has Trim built in and Snow Leopard didn't so the hacks for it back then were more intrusive than the little kernel modification that is done on Lion to enable it.

I've not noticed any speed differences after I enabled it.

  • 3 weeks later...

Is there any guide to follow after installing an SSD in a mbp? I know that when you install it in a PC you have to make several changes so it doesn't affect performance and drive life.

There shouldn't be any changes you have to make if you are using Windows 7. It automatically disables disk defragmenting, and that's really the only thing you have to worry about. I personally disable the paging file since it doesn't affect anything and it's a waste of space on a SSD, but that's just me.

Vice: you do know that instead of alias use the home folder location under users > right click on user and advance settings.

I've done this for 3 MacBook pros I own. 2007/2008/2010

Works great. I always felt the alias wasn't the real way to do it. For me it's changing each registry value to your data drive which is annoying. They need a true "user location" during windows setup so then your boot drive strictly the ssd. And data drive user and application folder. l

Vice: you do know that instead of alias use the home folder location under users > right click on user and advance settings.

I've done this for 3 MacBook pros I own. 2007/2008/2010

Works great. I always felt the alias wasn't the real way to do it. For me it's changing each registry value to your data drive which is annoying. They need a true "user location" during windows setup so then your boot drive strictly the ssd. And data drive user and application folder. l

I don't want everything running from my old home directory on my hard disk. Only my music, pictures and stuff.

I much prefer the Alias way otherwise I would have done it the way you said as I'm aware of it.

Oh I'm glad your away of it! Only think I wanna let you know is that the home directory is only the users. Which is music movies data etc.

Applications will always look for your HD with Mac system files on it.

But now we both know. I never knew aliases would work in the way you wanted.

I bought this 17" MacBook Pro in 2009 and it has served me great in that time not a single problem with any part of it. But I felt recently it was feeling a little sluggish. Especially when compared to my desktop hackintosh.

So I had a few SSD's laying around. None of them were big enough for all my data (Music, Images etc) but big enough for the operating system and my applications. So I bought one of these: http://compare.ebay....&var=sbar&cbt=y

Basically it is an optical drive shell that lets you put a 2.5" hard drive in your laptop where the optical drive was. I never use my optical drive anyway and I do have a USB optical drive for my desktop so if I really needed one I could just use that.

So anyway the reason I'm making this thread is to share just how amazingly fast my laptop feels now. I reinstalled Lion on to the SSD (fresh install) and everything is just so fast. It boots in 1/6th the time. Apps open with not even a single bounce on the dock. On my old Hard Disk chrome would bounce 3-4 times before it opened now it opens instantly after clicking its icon.

I'm really impressed. Also if any of you are considering doing the same thing I have a few tips. You know the OS X Alias system? Where by you right click a file or folder and select "Create Alias" these aliases are not just dumb shortcuts like on Windows. These aliases are recognized by the operating system as symbolic links. What this means is for example I can go to my iTunes folder on my Hard Disk right click it, create an alias then move that to where the iTunes folder should be on my SSD. Then when I open iTunes it thinks its accessing my music from my SSD but instead it's using that alias and retrieving it from my hard disk.

By using this Alias feature I've been able to keep all my data (Video, Music, Pictures, Virtual Machine Disks etc) on my Hard Disk but seamlessly use them as if they were on my SSD without losing the fast boot times the SSD provides or the instant launching of all my Applications.

So have any of you guys done this kind of upgrade yourselves?

Yes, this is the setup I'm using. I've had some flakiness with my optical drive bay adapter and the HDD that is currently connected to it. I think I need to pop my MBP open and reconnect everything...or it could just be that my HDD is going bad. I don't know. Occasionally the HDD will just disappear from the system until i do a reboot. It doesn't happen but maybe once a week or so, but when I had my user accounts on the HDD it caused all kinds of issues when it flaked out on me so I had to move those to my SSD drive.

In all honesty, I wasn't very pleased with my performance while my user accounts were on the HDD. So now my setup is to have them all on the SSD and I have moved my major media off my user home folder and onto the HDD. I've also forwarded my iOS backups to the HDD using a symlink.

My Mid 2012 15" MBP arrived today and after using a SSD in my old Mid 2010 15" I decided to try something a little different. Since the SATA port for the optical drive is more reliable in the newer models, with a OWC Data Doubler I've managed to setup a Stripe RAID with two Corsair Force GT 120GBs (one in optical drive bay and one in standard hard drive bay).

It was a lot easier than I thought and it's unbelievably quick. I too set up my actual user account on my SSD on my previous MBP and just stored media files on the HDD.

I'm currently searching for a decent USB 3.0 External Drive for storage with my current setup (any suggestions?)

Also, does anyone have any particularly good benchmarking tools for SSDs they use?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Sony announces Bungie layoffs that will affect "significant number of employees" by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Sony today announced that major layoffs are happening at its first-party studio Bungie, the developer that has spawned series like Halo, Destiny, and Marathon over the past decades. The news arrives just weeks after Bungie delivered the final update to Destiny 2, and it's that team being hit with the layoffs the most. CEO of Sony Interactive Entertainment Hermen Hulst revealed the staff reduction today, calling it "painful news." "Over the past several months, together with Bungie leadership, we reviewed the studio’s long-term direction, development priorities, resource needs, and role within our broader portfolio strategy," said Hulst, explaining the decision. "We explored multiple alternatives before concluding that a reduction was necessary to align the studio’s resources with its current priorities and long-term goals." The layoffs will be hitting "a significant number of employees" across most of the Destiny franchise development team. It doesn't look like Sony is planning to continue the series following Destiny 2's sunsetting update. The studio is said to be in early stages of looking at other projects to pivot to, but it's said that keeping the size of the team at current levels is no longer feasible. "We know this decision has a profound impact on the people affected, their families, friends, and teammates," said Bungie leadership in a separate message on social media. "While these changes are necessary to best position the studio now and for the future, that does not lessen the difficulty of this moment or the impact it has on those affected." At the same time, "some" of the Marathon development team are also affected by the layoffs. The recently released multiplayer-only extraction shooter title hasn't seen a big boom of players either, but the company is reportedly hoping that the live service experience will pick up players with future updates.
    • Microsoft adds reusable skills and finance data connectors to Copilot in Excel by Karthik Mudaliar Microsoft is giving Copilot in Excel a collection of new features aimed squarely at finance teams. The update introduces reusable instructions for common tasks, connections to services such as FactSet and Morningstar, and a better way to review what Copilot intends to do before it starts changing a workbook. The most interesting addition is 'Skills' finally coming to Copilot in Excel. Skills let companies teach Copilot how to handle a recurring process, so employees do not need to write the same detailed prompt every month. Users can create skills that can specify the steps Copilot should follow, along with the required layout, formulas, and formatting. Microsoft says users can create their own skills by saving a SKILL.md file in OneDrive. The file is written using Markdown and tells Copilot when and how to perform the task. Once it is available, a user can select the skill in the Copilot pane or mention it in a prompt using the @ symbol. There is also a library of prebuilt finance skills for customers who do not want to create their own. Microsoft plans to let developers distribute additional skills through the Microsoft Marketplace and the Microsoft 365 Admin Center, with LSEG, Ramp, Rogo, samaya.ai, Velixo, and Vena among the first partners involved. The company says that it is also expanding the external data that Copilot can access from inside Excel. New connectors are being added for CB Insights, Daloopa, FactSet, Morningstar, PitchBook, and S&P Global data through technology developed by Kensho. There is a catch, however. Accessing these services may require a separate subscription from the relevant data provider, so a Microsoft 365 Copilot licence will not necessarily unlock all of them. FactSet is also only available in preview for now, with general availability planned for July. Microsoft is also trying to make Copilot’s workbook edits easier to inspect. Users can switch to a planning mode that shows which sheets, cell ranges, formulas, and assumptions Copilot intends to work with before it begins making changes. Once the work is complete, the Show Changes pane can distinguish edits made by Copilot from those made by human collaborators. The update continues Microsoft’s push to turn Excel Copilot from a chatbot into an agent that can carry out longer tasks. The company previously added an Agent Mode capable of planning and completing multi-step Excel work. Microsoft also recently acquired financial AI startup Fintool, another indication that finance is becoming a key target for its Excel AI strategy. Prebuilt skills, personalization, workbook rules, external connectors, planning mode, and Copilot attribution in Show Changes are generally available to Microsoft 365 Copilot customers using Excel on the web, Windows, and macOS. Custom skills are initially available to Microsoft 365 Insiders on Windows and Mac starting today. Microsoft plans to make them generally available across Windows, Mac, and the web over the next month. Partner-built skills are expected during the third quarter of the year. Availability may still differ depending on region and licensing.
    • Exactly. They serve different (although related) purposes.
    • Do not enter the code under any circumstances, or you will be sorry. It's definitely and most likely a hacking attempt.  That happened to me a couple of years ago, and I kept receiving those prompts for months. It's simply the attacker trying to get you tired of the constant requests, so you just give up and enter the code, so they can log in to your account. 
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      kinowa earned a badge
      First Post
    • Rookie
      krychek57 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Grand Master
      Jaybonaut went up a rank
      Grand Master
    • One Year In
      Philsl earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      438
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      169
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      134
    4. 4
      Xenon
      77
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!