Solid State Drives (SSD) are now a build to order option on the Summer 2010 released 27 inch iMacs. SSD prices are high at this early stage, but likely will be standard in a few years with a substantial price drop.
So, I have been thinking that it would seem possible to add an SSD to an iMac after purchase. You can always swap out a standard hard drive on any computer with a SSD if you only needed limited drive space or had money falling out of your shoes to acquire a large capacity.
There are a few threads on AC already, mentioning the benefits of SSD drives for audio server computers (mac mini, macbook pro, etc.), though nothing substantial. Yet.
Being in the market for a new home computer, I've been researching the non-audio computing benefits of SSDs. Most casual computer users would only see a slight benefit during actual application use. But image and video processing, graphics, animation, CAD, other high data cruncher apps will see the most benefit. It seems that most task times are cut in half. My thought is to use the SSD as the boot drive, only holding the OS and Applications folder (currently these total up to approximately 6GB and 9GB on my two macs), so only a small size is needed. Now I have to wait to see if the cabling is present for the SSD, so I can add my own later. Let the iMac tear downs begin.
The option to
ADD a 256GB SSD, during purchase from Apple, is $750, as of on 7/27/10. Only available on the 27in i5/i7 Quad-core models.
Here are some pricing examples of alternate SSDs, as of 7/27/10. (Copied from a review of
OWC SSD on MacWorld.)
Other World Computing
Pro models (7% over provisioning and 3 year warranty)
60GB: $179.99
120GB: $319.99
240GB: $629.99
480GB: $1599.99
Pro RE models (28% over provisioning and 5 year warranty)
50GB: $209.99
100GB: $369.99
200GB: $679.99
400GB: $1679.99
Here are some other recent SSD reviews-with test scores, etc.
Western Digital SSD $720 256GB
Kingston SSD $319 128GB
I am in no real hurry to add the SSD, as the standard Intel iMac will toast my old PPC G5, which my first gen Intel macbookpro already does. This could be helpful for those wondering about SSD and a good bookmark on pricing changes.