![]() The motherboard of that older computer is, by the way, an MSI H61MA-E35 (B3). Hopefully it'll help you to find it in your own BIOS/UEFI. That's why I've made two screen shots of the BIOS of an older computer, in which you can see this particular feature. This feature may be hard to find in the BIOS/UEFI, because there's absolutely no standardization at all in menu structures for BIOS and UEFI (sigh.). But on old machines the default might be IDE. On modern computers AHCI is the default, so that's fine. A Solid State Disk, or rather Drive (SSD), is usually only recognized properly by the BIOS or UEFI, when in the BIOS/UEFI the feature AHCI has been activated for SATA (instead of IDE). The things that I warn against, are described after that.īIOS and UEFI: make sure it's set to AHCIĢ. Considerably longer than an old-fashioned spinning platter hard disk, anyway.īelow I'll start by mentioning the things I recommend to do. ![]() Taking into account the long warranty periods that the manufacturers are giving, a minimum of 10 years should be a reasonable expectation. With those, you'll be able to enjoy your SSD carefree, for years and years to come! It'll show you how to achieve a very good result by applying just a few rather simple measures. This how-to is meant to be a "best practice". First a word of caution: don't exaggerate! There's a lot of exaggeration to be found on the web on this issue you see people who take all kinds of extreme and complicated precautions. Enjoy your SSD carefree for years and years Dual boot or Virtual Machine? Don't let Windows kill your SSD Limiting the disk write actions of Chrome Putting the Firefox network cache into the RAM Limiting the disk write actions of Firefox BIOS and UEFI: make sure it's set to AHCI
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