Intel Optane Memory on 6th gen?

taatong1

Honorable
Jan 12, 2014
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hi, I would like to know if the intel optane memory would work on 6th generation processor?
I heard that it works for some.

i have the i5-4609k on z97 motherboard
 
Solution
Depends on what you are using it for. If the SSD is already formatted and in use, then no. My understanding with RST is that you can take any fast storage and tell it to act as cache for another slower drive. Basically turns any drive into a hybrid drive when you mix an SSD with a standard hard drive.

Samsung also offers their Magician software? Might have the name wrong, but it lets you use system ram as a cache for Samsung SSDs.

Presumably the same could be done with RST using a RAM drive.

Basically comes down to how much performance you are expecting out of a given drive and if it is meeting your needs. Not really much you can do about drive reads from source hard drives, this would mostly be about writes and actual workloads.

If...

taatong1

Honorable
Jan 12, 2014
11
0
10,510


Oh, Sorry but i meant i5-4690k... If anybody have tried pls tell me bsce i am really interested

 

rgd1101

Don't
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gasaraki answered
 

taatong1

Honorable
Jan 12, 2014
11
0
10,510




Do you think i should get one or would it be a waste of money? bcse i have a samsung evo 840 ssd to run with
 

rgd1101

Don't
Moderator


are you getting a new pc? cause it is NOT going to work on your current PC.
read more about it http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/intel-optane-3d-xpoint-memory,5032.html
under System Requirements For Optane Memory
 

Eximo

Titan
Ambassador
Depends on what you are using it for. If the SSD is already formatted and in use, then no. My understanding with RST is that you can take any fast storage and tell it to act as cache for another slower drive. Basically turns any drive into a hybrid drive when you mix an SSD with a standard hard drive.

Samsung also offers their Magician software? Might have the name wrong, but it lets you use system ram as a cache for Samsung SSDs.

Presumably the same could be done with RST using a RAM drive.

Basically comes down to how much performance you are expecting out of a given drive and if it is meeting your needs. Not really much you can do about drive reads from source hard drives, this would mostly be about writes and actual workloads.

If you are just using a HDD as bulk storage for games or media, then it probably won't make a huge difference.
 
Solution