I'm running out of space on my work machine and intend on buying a new HDD drive to add to the 3TB HDD (storage) and 250GB SSD (OS and pseudo-scratch space) I already have.
I wonder whether the hybrid drives (i.e. this 4TB HDD and 8GB SSD) would have any benefit, as I don't really know how the drive would work with stuff like high throughput NGS IO. The standard way they work is by loading in regular applications into the SSD portion, but that's not really going to help with processing, and I already have my OS on the SSD.
Does anyone have any experience with these drives in their machines, and whether they actually help speed things up at all?
Seems unlikely to have much of an impact on typical IO-heavy analyses to me. At the end of the day, the throughput is still limited by your ability to pull the data from that 100GB bam file, which will be on spinning disk, not the SSD.
That said, even for day-to-day work (email, browsing, etc), SSDs are amazing. Heavy apps, like Illustrator, no longer take minutes to open - they just pop open.