Upgrading to a SSD hard

Iran-Iran-Iran

Reputable
Sep 9, 2015
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Hello there

First of one ,please let me ask you about creating several partitions on a SSD hard.Can I create and have more than one partition on a SSD hard?

The second question is
If I can create more than one partition on a SSD hard,then am I able to have my multi-boot program to boot and run more than one "Windows "in case I want to install two OS on a SSD hard?
and finally
How about the"Virtual memory" in the "Windows" OS installed on a SSD hard now?
Please consider that my machine has 4 GB of RAM and their slots are full before, now I have two options to buy a SSD hard to upgrade.
The first option is a costly one which supports SATA III exceptionally well
and the second one is a bit cheaper SSD hard with a lower speed which supports SATA III as well.
Now , if the motherboard of the machine is just able to support SATA II( 3 GB/S) then what do you think ?Since there are two options...

The First option: buying the costly SSD and increasing the "Virtual memory" ,for example from 5555Mb to more in the hope of having performance increase from RAM(fully slots 4 GB RAM).

The second option: buying a cheaper SSD hard and doing nothing about the"Virtual memory" because there is not a clear difference in the performance increasing which is boosted by the "Virtual memory" increased to more capacity even with a high speed SSD hard ,since I have a fully 4GB of RAM before and the motherboard doesn't support SATA III.
Which one do you approve?

Many thanks in advance
Mahmood Mostafaee
 
Solution
Partitions ? Yes you can do anything you can with a HDD, no restrictions.
Agreed that virtual memory is no substitute for real RAM speed wise even on a SSD.
Sata3 SSD wil run slower than on SATA3 controller but will still be much faster than any HDD, even on SATA2 controller so fast (and expensive) SSD is not going to help much, money is better invested in larger capacity.
Partitions ? Yes you can do anything you can with a HDD, no restrictions.
Agreed that virtual memory is no substitute for real RAM speed wise even on a SSD.
Sata3 SSD wil run slower than on SATA3 controller but will still be much faster than any HDD, even on SATA2 controller so fast (and expensive) SSD is not going to help much, money is better invested in larger capacity.
 
Solution