My brothers Chuwi laptop had major problems. Now he got a wal-mart gift card for the price he paid for the Chuwi. He is eyeing an HP laptop with 256gb ssd. Is that the same as a regular harddrive?
Can he download stuff like a regular hard drive where you get 256gb of space or is it like a cloud service or something?
Dont let your friend buy HP, they are filled with cunty bloatware and made of shit parts, especially the screens and their hinges. Only assholes let their friends buy HP.
Yes it's the same storage size (SSD vs mechanical doesn't change that). But I would caution to get a larger drive. From my experience, 256gb gets pretty limiting. I would go with at least 512gb.
HDD (Hard Disk Drive) is like a CD, slower but more storage.
SSDs (Solid State Drive) are like flash drives, they are faster but not as much storage.
Also if your drive breaks, an HDD often only fails in part so your data might be recoverable. If SSDs fail, they fail all the way, and there's no way to get it back.
And then there's some quirks about secure delete, fragmentation, the amount of certified writes and things like that, but this is only a broad overview.
Also if you hear internal or external, that means external you gotta plug in via USB, while internal drives you have to open your case, insert the drive and connect it to the mainboard and power supply.
And M.2 drives are just way smaller SSDs that are always internal and they can be a lot faster than normal SSDs, but they need their own special slot on the mainboard.
I hope this helps :)
Also asking for the certified hardware nerds to correct and supplement my comment ^^
Can confirm the thing about failing HDD's. Both of mine are failing but one is significantly worse than the other, things fail in certain parts, like entire folders, or just a few corrupt files. When I've had flash drives go bad it's catastrophic (which is why I have like five of them oop)
Years ago when I worked in IT, HP were the worst computers ever made. Maybe consider looking at Asus or Lenovo.
It's been a while so maybe HP isn't as completely worthless as they were before, but I still don't trust them
Also heard and have seen it from HP work notebooks, wouldn't wanna buy them now.
Also older Acer or Lenovo laptops used to have a bunch of bloatware on there. Idk if that changed significantly. I do have to say, think pads haven't let me down though.
Others have answered your questions. Just wanted to point out that 256GB is not very big, depending on how much your brother wants to download (and how much of what he downloads he wants to keep).
If he downloads a lot of movies that might get annoying, but if he's just streaming them from a Netflix app or something that's totally doable.
If he plays fallout idk how demanding that is to your disk, but games in general profit from faster storage. Movies usually don't as much.
If he plays a lot of AAA games that are bigger, his drive will get crowded real quick with 256gb. If it's just a few fallout games, he will be fine I think.
That said, 256gb is on the lower end of modern notebook hardware FYI, even on SSDs.
There are two types of persistent storage drives for computers: HDD (hard disk drive), which have a spinning platter inside on which the data is stored, and SSD (solid state drive), which unlike HDDs have no moving mechanical parts and store their data in semiconductor cells.
HDDs are still cheaper per gb at large sizes and offer larger capacities, which is why you mostly will see them in storage servers.
SSDs are faster, more shock resistant (due to no mechanical parts) and I think consume less power.
Because of that nowadays you will hardly ever see HDDs in laptops anymore, it's all SSDs (which can be either of the sata or nvme type, the latter being faster)
The lack of moving parts also makes SSDs drastically more drop resistant, and just generally less likely to die on you randomly. Not that they can't, it's just less common.
As others have said 256 GB really isn't very much if you're going to play modern AAA games on it. I got ARK on my computer which is around 200 GB and a lot of AAA games nowadays are at least a couple dozen GB, with some in the hundreds. It can be annoying having to pick and choose which games to wipe to free up space, so just a heads up!