This article or section needs references that appear in a reputable publication such as journals, monographs, newspapers or websites reliable. A notebook solid state festplatte or SSD (the acronym of solid-state drive) is a data storage device that uses nonvolatile memory such as flash memory or a volatile memory such as SDRAM, to store data, instead of the magnetic spinning platters found in conventional hard drives. Compared to traditional hard drives, solid state drives are less susceptible to shocks, are almost inaudible, and a lower access time and latency. SSDs make use of the same interface as hard drives, and therefore are easily interchangeable without having to use adapters or expansion cards to make them compatible with the equipment. Although technically not disks sometimes wrongly translated in Spanish the "D" SSD as disk when in fact represents the word drive, which could be translated as a unit or device.
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