Installing an SSD (solid-state drive) inside your PC, and making it the drive Windows starts up from, is a very effective way to reduce loading times for games and software, and make your system feel faster in daily use. But if you don’t fancy undertaking an internal upgrade, the USB 3.0 (and faster) ports found on all recent desktop PCs and laptops let you take advantage of SSD speeds with external storage, and it needn’t even be expensive.
This 240GB drive is cheap, and looks it, with a basic textured plastic case. Inside, however, is an SSD chassis much like the ones sold as internal SATA drives (see page 22), and with no moving parts it should be hard to damage. Adata claims read and write speeds of over 400Mbit/s,…
