I'm not talking about endurance, but data corruption. The PS3 doesn't have TRIM implemented, so all the data is handled in a non-optimized way. With time, the disk became corrupt because of this, and the PS3 (with all the encryption and stuff) is very sensitive to any "bad sector" that may appear from a bad data handling of the PS3 itself.
There are plenty of cases here on the forums about the consecuences of using a SSD for a long time.
It's the console itself. Think of it as the PS3 doing a lot of fragmentation on the SSD, and then the disk becomes so slow and fragmentated that the performance degrades. With time, the data is going to be stored where it fits, increasing the risk of data corruption. As the PS3 encrypts the drive, a minor change in a sector will render the data unsuable.
You misunderstood. There are no conflicting opinions, all what was said here are real cases (that's how "robust and safe" is to use an SSD on a PS3... a complete lottery).
The PS3 is not made for SSDs, it has nothing to do with the SATA interface (
TRIM is a command to handle store data, not data transfer).
Using an SSD will improve a little the loading speeds of the games, but that's all. It will not improve the boot speed or the XMB.