>He defragments his SSD everyday
He defragments his SSD everyday
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Recommended to do it once a month, twice tops
>defragmenting anything in the current year + 3
It's pretty interesting once you get an idea how SSDs work but in general the random 4KB read IOPS on an SSD is so high compared to a HDD that even a heavily fragmented SSD won't slow down much. Controllers these days also take that into account when writing data to the NAND and you have to be basically maxing out an SSD capacity to feel any kind of slow down but that comes from the overprovisioning running out and not fragmentation itself.
>She degausses her monitor next to her floppies everyday
>He uses online TRIM with his Samsung SSD running Linux
>he has an ssd
laugh my butt off
L O L
I just sent this to my dad, he loves this kind of stuff
Literally no difference to the user between HDD and SSD. Huge fucking meme. SSDs have shit random write performance too which is what the OS does.
kill yourself
maybe it should transition into a human first
>SSDs have shit random write performance too
cheap ones do
SSDs have gotten reliable enough that you can overwrite the whole thing daily for a couple decades before failure is probable. You're already living dangerously if the failure of a single component would would cause you much inconvenience. Back up your shit.
I worked with a Windows admin who kept telling me to keep magnets away from optical media.
i've seen defrag shorten the lives of ssd. not recommended.
> and no, Windows defrag isn't shortening the life of your SSD unnecessarily.
> Scott Hanselman
> "Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee.'
lmao.
was this person retarded?
actually interesting
>Literally no difference to the user between HDD and SSD
Is this some kind of cope or are you actually retarded?
I don't make back-ups.
biribiri a cutie :0