LOL, I have no idea what all that means hahaha
Firstly an SSD just means a "solid state drive" and as the name implies there are no moving parts. Whereas a traditional HDD (hard disk drive) have moving parts (the read and write heads and arm assembly).
What does that means for you when you switch to a SSD? That is means...
1. Lower power draw which obviously means your laptop's battery will lasts longer and it will be cooler. Than having a similar HDD in there.
2. HUGE performance boost. We are talking almost instantaneous booting (less than 30 seconds).
3. Stable, a new HDD may fails on you but in SSDs assuming you pay up for even a half decent one it will likely be more stable than a comparable HDD. More on that later...
Now SSDs just like anything else come in different formats and so on.
A SLC (Single Level Cell) drive is the best that money can buy. However there rarely any that are within the consumer reach. So generally these are reserved for enterprise usages. Where reliability and operations are at absolute premium for obvious reasons.
Down the price scale and the quality spectrum are MLC (Multi Level Cell) drives. These bad boys will still typically outrun a TLC (Triple Level Cell) drive by about 2 to 10 times depending on the exact brand purchased. Pricing and storage comprises are also worthwhile if your wanting your drive to lasts any significant amount of time.
Now if your looking for the "gas station sushi" drives than TLC drives are just that. They will "get you by" but don't expect them to lasts years on end.
Hope this clears things up!