Well, the magician software must agree with you since it leaves the
pagefile in tact...mine has an 8GB pagefile.
This upgrade makes a significant improvement over the hdd in system
response. but I have to admit that the reason I was even willing to
consider it is because this x220t is the only laptop I've ever owned
that I could warm up to. There are so many "little" tweaks here and
there about this laptop that just make it a pleasure to use...not the
least of which is the keyboard and screen...and the relative light
weight compared to power. Too bad that I would never recommend this
laptop to anyone because lenovo is a total pain to deal with.....if you
ever had to call them, get really for a poor experience. IMO and IME.
On 1/21/2012 3:12 PM, Greg Sevart wrote:
Windows 7 will disable superfetch (and other high-level caching) on good
SSDs automatically, no need to take action. In any case, it's a read
operation from the disk perspective, and therefore makes no impact on SSD
wear.
Pagefile should also be left enabled. Microsoft has found that pagefile
reads outnumber writes 40:1, and that most reads are small and random
(things that SSDs do very well), and most writes are large (nearly 50% 1MB
in size)--also something that SSDs handle well.
If you want your SSD to last 20 years, sure, disable it--but if you want
optimal performance, leave it on. The SSD wearout fear for single-user
workloads is far overblown. Every consumer SSD failure I've seen yet was due
to a firmware crash or some other drive defect--not wear.
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Zulfiqar
Naushad
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2012 9:40 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [H] Cloning the HD
By the way. Run the Samsung ssd magician software and make sure to optimize
your system with it. You must not run a swap drive and also disable prefetch
and other services. Otherwise you will prematurely wear out your ssd.
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 21, 2012, at 6:35 PM, "Anthony Q. Martin"<[email protected]>
wrote:
may have to switch over to that. The first time with EaseUS the drive
would not boot, though the data was there.
On 1/21/2012 10:33 AM, [email protected] wrote:
I've never run into any trick. Cloned with acronis numerous times
------Original Message------
From: Anthony Q. Martin
Sender: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
ReplyTo: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [H] Cloning the HD
Sent: Jan 21, 2012 9:32 AM
is there some trick to gettting a cloned disc to boot?
On 1/21/2012 3:44 AM, John Steinbruner wrote:
Download Freeware EaseUS diskcopy and you are good to go......
http://www.easeus.com/disk-copy/
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T